Abstract

The reaction mechanism of electron transfer from the interchangeable metalloproteins plastocyanin (Pc) and cytochrome c6 (Cyt) to photooxidized P700 in photosystem I (PSI) has been studied by laser-flash absorption spectroscopy using a number of evolutionarily differentiated organisms such as cyanobacteria (Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803), green algae (Monoraphidium braunii), and higher plants (spinach). PSI reduction by Pc or Cyt shows different kinetics depending on the organism from which the photosystem and metalloproteins are isolated. According to the experimental data herein reported, three different kinetic models are proposed by assuming either an oriented collisional reaction mechanism (type I), a minimal two-step mechanism involving complex formation followed by intracomplex electron transfer (type II), or rearrangement of the reaction partners within the complex before electron transfer takes place (type III). Our findings suggest that PSI was able to first optimize its interaction with positively charged Cyt and that the evolutionary replacement of the ancestral Cyt by Pc, as well as the appearance of the fast kinetic phase in the Pc/PSI system of higher plants, would involve structural modifications in both the donor protein and PSI.

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