A New Pathway for Transmembrane Electron Transfer in Photosynthetic Reaction Centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Not Involving the Excited Special Pair
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 1997 papers
Abstract
It is generally accepted that electron transfer in bacterial photosynthesis is driven by the first singlet excited state of a special pair of bacteriochlorophylls (P*). We have examined the first steps of electron transfer in a mutant of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction center in which charge separation from P* is dramatically slowed down. The results provide for the first time clear evidence that excitation of the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll in the active branch of the reaction center (B(A)) drives ultrafast transmembrane electron transfer without the involvement of P*, demonstrating a new and efficient mechanism for solar energy transduction in photosynthesis. The most abundant charge-separated intermediate state probably is P+B(A)-, which is formed within 200 fs from B(A)* and decays with a lifetime of 6.5 ps into P+H(A)-. We also see evidence for the involvement of a B(A)+H(A)- state in the alternative pathway.
Related Papers
- → A New Pathway for Transmembrane Electron Transfer in Photosynthetic Reaction Centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Not Involving the Excited Special Pair(1997)115 cited
- → B-Side Electron Transfer in a Rhodobacter sphaeroides Reaction Center Mutant in Which the B-Side Monomer Bacteriochlorophyll Is Replaced with Bacteriopheophytin(1999)89 cited
- → Selective photochemical reduction of either of the two bacteriopheophytins in reaction centers of Rps. sphaeroides R‐26(1985)52 cited
- → Kinetics and Energetics of Electron Transfer Reactions in a Photosynthetic Bacterial Reaction Center Assembled with Zinc Bacteriochlorophylls(2009)
- in chromatophores and reaction cen Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides (ubiquinone/bacterial photosynthesis/electron acceptor complex)(2016)