Abstract

The primary electron donor in the reaction center of purple photosynthetic bacteria consists of a pair of bacteriochlorophylls (PL and PM). The oxidized dimer (P+) is expected to have an absorption band in the mid-IR, whose energy and dipole strength depend in part on the resonance interactions between the two bacteriochlorophylls. A broad absorption band with the predicted properties was found in a previously unexplored region of the spectrum, centered near 2600 cm-1 in reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and several other species of bacteria that contain bacteriochlorophyll a, and near 2750 cm-1 in Rhodopseudomonas viridis. The band is not seen in the absorption spectrum of the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll cation in solution, and it is missing or much diminished in the reaction centers of bacterial mutants that have a bacteriopheophytin in place of either PL or PM. With the aid of a relatively simple quantum mechanical model, the measured transition energy and dipole strength of the band can be used to solve for the resonance interaction matrix element that causes an electron to move back and forth between PL and PM, and also for the energy difference between states in which a positive charge is localized on either PL or PM. (The absorption band can be viewed as representing a transition between supermolecular eigenstates that are obtained by mixing these basis states.) The values of the matrix element obtained in this way agree reasonably well with values calculated by using semiempirical atomic resonance integrals and the reaction center crystal structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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