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Publication

High Yield of B-side Electron Transfer at 77 K in the Photosynthetic Reaction Center Protein from Rhodobacter sphaeroides

Authors

Magdaong, Nikki Cecil; Faries, Kaitlyn; Buhrmaster, James; Tira, Gregory; Wyllie, Ryan; Kohout, Claire; Hanson, Deborah; Laible, Philip; Holten, Dewey; Kirmaier, Christine

Abstract

The primary electron transfer (ET) processes at 295 and 77 K are compared for the Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction center (RC) pigmentprotein complex from 13 mutants including a wild-type control. The engineered RCs bear mutations in the L and M polypeptides that largely inhibit ET from the excited state P* of the primary electron donor (P, a bacteriochlorophyll dimer) to the normally photoactive A-side cofactors and enhance ET to the C2-symmetry related, and normally photoinactive, B-side cofactors. P* decay is multiexponential at both temperatures and modeled as arising from subpopulations that differ in contributions of two-step ET (e.g., P* P+BB P+HB), one-step superexchange ET (e.g., P* P+HB), and P* ground state. [HB and BB are monomeric bacteriopheophytin and bacteriochlorophyll, respectively The relative abundances of the subpopulations and the inherent rate constants of the P* decay routes vary with temperature. Regardless, ET to produce P+HB is generally faster at 77 K than at 295 K by about a factor of 2. A key finding is that the yield of P+HB, which ranges from 5% to 90% among the mutant RCs, is essentially the same at 77 K as at 295 K in each case. Overall, the results show that ET from P* to the B-side cofactors in these mutants does not require thermal activation and involves combinations of ET mechanisms analogous to those operative on the A side in the native RC.