ASYMMETRIC BINDING OF THE PRIMARY ACCEPTOR QUINONE IN REACTION CENTERS OF THE PHOTOSYNTHETIC BACTERIUM RHODOBACTER-SPHAEROIDES R26, PROBED WITH Q-BAND (35 GHZ) EPR SPECTROSCOPY
Js. Vandenbrink et al., ASYMMETRIC BINDING OF THE PRIMARY ACCEPTOR QUINONE IN REACTION CENTERS OF THE PHOTOSYNTHETIC BACTERIUM RHODOBACTER-SPHAEROIDES R26, PROBED WITH Q-BAND (35 GHZ) EPR SPECTROSCOPY, FEBS letters, 353(3), 1994, pp. 273-276
The reaction center (RC)-bound primary acceptor quinone Q(A) of the ph
otosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 functions as a one-
electron gate. The radical anion Q(A)(.-) is proposed to have an asymm
etric electron distribution, induced by the protein environment. We re
place the native ubiquinone-10 (UQ10) with specifically C-13-labelled
UQ10, and use Q-band (35 GHz) EPR spectroscopy to investigate this phe
nomenon in closer detail. The direct observation of the C-13-hyperfine
splitting of the g(z)-component of UQ10(A)(.-) in the RC and in froze
n isopropanol shows that the electron spin distribution is symmetric i
n the isopropanol glass, and asymmetric in the RC. Our results allow q
ualitative assessment of the spin and charge distribution for QA(.-) i
n the RC. The carbonyl oxygen of the semiquinone anion nearest to the
S = 2Fe(2+)-ion and Q(B) is shown to acquire the highest (negative) ch
arge density.