Abstract

We have examined the temperature dependence of the rate of electron transfer to ubiquinone from the bacteriopheophytin (BPh) that serves as an initial electron acceptor (I) in reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. The kinetics were measured from the decay of the 665-nm absorption band of the reduced BPh (BPh − or I −) and from the recovery of the BPh band at 545 nm, following excitation of reaction centers in polyvinyl alcohol films with 30-ps flashes. The measured time constant decreases from 229 ± 25 ps at 295 K to 97 ± 8 ps near 100 K and then remains constant down to 5 K. The temperature dependence of the kinetics can be rationalized on the assumption that the reaction results in changes in the frequencies of numerous low-energy nuclear (vibrational) modes of the electron carriers and/or the protein. The kinetics measured in the absorption bands near 765 and 795 nm show essentially the same temperature dependence as those measured at 545 or 665 nm, but the time constants vary with detection wavelength. The time constant measured in the 795-nm region (70 ± 10 ps at 5 and 76 K) is shorter than that seen in the absorption bands of the BPh; the time constant measured at 758 nm is longer. Time constants measured with reaction centers in solution at 288 K also vary with the detection wavelength. These results can be explained on the assumption that the absorption changes measured at some wavelengths reflect nuclear relaxations rather than electron transfer. The absorption changes at 795 nm probably reflect a relaxation of the bacteriochlorophyll molecules that are near neighbors of the BPh and the primary electron donor (P). Those near 530 and 755 nm probably are due to the second BPh molecule, which does not appear to undergo oxidation or reduction.

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