Abstract

The gene (puhA) encoding the H subunit of the reaction center (RC) was deleted by site-directed interposon mutagenesis by using a kanamycin resistance cassette lacking transcriptional terminators to eliminate polar effects in both the wild-type strain Rhodospirillum rubrum S1 and the carotenoid-less strain R. rubrum G9. The puhA interposon mutants were incapable of photoheterotrophic growth but grew normally under aerobic chemoheterotrophic conditions. Absorption spectroscopy and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the RCs were absent. In minimal medium and also in modified medium containing succinate and fructose, the light-harvesting 1 complex (LH1) levels of the S1-derived mutants were about 70 to 100% of the wild-type levels in the same media. The correct assembly of LH1 in the membrane and the pigment-pigment interaction were confirmed by near-infrared circular dichroism spectroscopy. LH1 formation was almost absent when the carotenoid-less G9-derived puhA mutants were grown in standard minimal medium, suggesting that carotenoids may stabilize LH1. In the fructose-containing medium, however, the LH1 levels of the G9 mutants were 70 to 100% of the parental strain levels. Electron micrographs of thin sections of R. rubrum revealed photosynthetic membranes in all mutants grown in succinate-fructose medium. These studies indicate that the H subunit of the RC is necessary neither for maximal formation of LH1 nor for photosynthetic membrane formation but is essential for functional RC assembly.

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