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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Electron donation from membrane-bound cytochrome c to the photosynthetic reaction center in whole cells and isolated membranes of Heliobacterium gestii.

The reaction between membrane-bound cytochrome c and the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll g dimer P798 was studied in the whole cells and isolated membranes of Heliobacterium gestii. In the whole cells, the flash-oxidized P798(+) was rereduced in multiple exponential phases with half times (t (1/2)s) of 10 mus, 300 mus and 4 ms in relative amplitudes of 40, 35 and 25%, respectively. The faster two phases were in parallel with the oxidation of cytochrome c. In isolated membranes, a significantly slow oxidation of the membrane-bound cytochrome c was detected with t (1/2) = 3 ms. This slow rate, however, again became faster with the addition of Mg(2+). The rate showed a high temperature dependency giving apparent activation energies of 88.2 and 58.9 kJ/ mol in the whole cells and isolated membranes, respectively. Therefore, membrane-bound cytochrome c donates electrons to the P798(+) in a collisional reaction mode like the reaction of water-soluble proteins. The rereduction of the oxidized cytochrome c was suppressed by the addition of stigmatellin both in the whole cells and isolated membranes. This indicates that the electron transfer from the cytochrome bc complex to the photooxidized P798(+) is mediated by the membrane-bound cytochrome c. The multiple flash excitation study showed that 2-3 hemes c were connected to the P798. By the heme staining after the SDS-PAGE analysis of the membraneous proteins, two cytochromes c were detected on the gel indicating apparent molecular masses of 17 and 30 kDa, respectively. The situation resembles the case in green sulfur bacteria, that is, the membrane-bound cyotochrome c (z) couples electron transfer between the cytochrome bc complex and the P840 reaction center complex.[1]

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