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2.
Biophys J ; 24(1): 361-9, 1978 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-309343

ABSTRACT

Photosynthetic application of picosecond spectroscopic techniques to bacterial reaction centers has led to a much greater understanding of the chemical nature of the initial steps of photosynthesis. Within 10 ps after excitation, a charge transfer complex is formed between the primary donor, a "special pair" of bacteriochlorophyll molecules, and a transient acceptor involving bacteriopheophytin. This complex subsequently decays in about 120 ps by donating the electron to a metastable acceptor, a tightly bound quinone.Recent experiments with conventional optical and ESR techniques have shown that when reaction centers are illuminated by a series of single turnover flashes in the presence of excess electron donors and acceptors, a stable, anionic ubisemiquinone is formed on odd flashes and destroyed on even flashes, suggesting that the acceptor region contains a second quinone that acts as a two-electron gate between the reaction center and subsequent electron transport events involving the quinone pool.Utilizing standard picosecond techniques, we have examined the decay of the charge transfer complex in reaction centers in the presence of the stable semiquinone, formed by flash illumination with a dye laser 10 s before excitation by a picosecond pulse. In this state the decay rate for the charge transfer complex is considerably slower than when no electron is present in the quinone acceptor region. This indicates fairly strong coupling between constituents of the reaction center-quinone acceptor complex and may provide a probe into the relative positions of the various components.


Subject(s)
Bacteriochlorophylls , Chlorophyll , Photosynthesis , Chlorophyll/analogs & derivatives , Kinetics , Oxidation-Reduction , Quinones , Rhodobacter sphaeroides
3.
Biophys J ; 22(1): 121-4, 1978 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-638221

ABSTRACT

We have observed, by low-temperature picosecond spectroscopy, a photo-induced transient at 580 nm in light-adapted bacteriorhodopsin. The transient was characterized by bleaching in the 550-585-nm regions within 6 ps and recovery in approximately 20 ps. The spectral intensity of the transient is found to be enhanced at lower temperatures, and the lifetime slightly elongated.


Subject(s)
Bacteriorhodopsins , Carotenoids , Kinetics , Photochemistry , Spectrophotometry
8.
Science ; 188(4195): 1301-4, 1975 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17772598

ABSTRACT

A transient absorption spectrum has been measured in Rhodopseudomonas spheroides R26 reaction centers. Its salient features indicate that both the bacteriopheophytin and bacteriochlorophyll chromophores play a role in the excited state. Decay of this state yields a rise time for oxidation of the reaction center complex of about 150 picoseconds.

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