Abstract

We report on recent 95 and 360 GHz high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR) studies of wild-type and mutant reaction centers (RCs) from the photosynthetic bacteriumRhodobacter sphaeroides. Taking advantage of the excellent spectral and temporal resolution of EPR at 95 and 360 GHz, the electron-transfer (ET) cofactors radical ions and spin-correlated radical pairs were characterized by theirg- and hyperfine-tensor components, their anisotropicT2 relaxation as well as by the dipolar interaction between P865•+QA•− radical pairs. The goal of these studies is to better understand the dominant factors determining the specificity and directionality of transmembrane ET processes in photosynthetic RC proteins. In particular, our multifrequency experiments elucidate the subtle cofactor-protein interactions, which are essential for fine-tuning the ET characteristics, e.g., the unidirectionality of the light-induced ET pathways along the A branch of the RC protein. By our high-field techniques, frozen-solution RCs of novel site-specific single and double mutants ofR. sphaeroides were studied to modulate the ET characteristics, e.g., even to the extent that dominant B branch ET prevails. The presented multifrequency EPR work culminates in first 360 GHz ENDOR results from organic nitroxide radicals as well as in first 95 GHz high-field PELDOR results from orientationally selected spin-polarized radical pairs P865•+QA•−, which allow to determine the full geometrical structure of the pairs even in frozen-solution RCs.

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