Abstract

Photochemically active reaction centers were isolated from the facultatively aerobic gliding green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. The absorption difference spectrum, obtained after a flash, reflected the oxidation of P-865, the primary donor, and agreed with that observed in a purified membrane preparation from the same organism (Bruce, B.D., Fuller, R.C. and Blankenship, R.E. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 6532–6536). By analysis of the kinetics in the presence of reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulfate to prevent accumulation of oxidized P-865, the absorption difference spectrum of an electron acceptor was obtained. The electron acceptor was identified as menaquinone (vitamin K-2), which is reduced to the semiquinone anion in a stoichiometry of approximately one molecule per reaction center. Reduction of menaquinone was accompanied by changes in pigment absorption in the infrared region. Our results indicate that the electron-acceptor chain of C. aurantiacus is very similar to that of purple bacteria.

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