Abstract

The photoreduction of iron-sulfur centers was studied at low temperature in Photosystem I particles from spinach and the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803, which contain various amounts of vitamin K-1 (recently tentatively identified as the acceptor A 1). The irreversible charge separation that was progressively induced at low temperature between P-700 and F A (or F B) by successive laser flashes was studied at 15 K. Its maximum amount after a large number of flashes was shown to be fairly independent of the number (0, 1 or 2) of vitamins K-1 per reaction center. Moreover, the first flash yield of this charge separation was diminished by only about 50% when vitamin K-1 was completely absent from the particles by comparison with particles containing one or two vitamin K-1 per reaction center. When F A and F B were prereduced, the iron-sulfur center F X was also reversibly photoreduced at 9 K in the absence of vitamin K-1. The implications of these results for the electron pathways of Photosystem I are discussed and it is proposed that a direct electron transfer from A − 0 to the iron-sulfur centers is highly efficient at low temperature.

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