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ABSTRACT: An increasing number of publications report on the efficacy of trehalose in preserving organisms, cells, and macromolecules from adverse environmental conditions such as extreme temperatures and dryness. Although the mechanism by which this disaccharide exerts its protection is still debated, the implementation of trehalose as stabilizer is becoming a praxis in several preparative protocols from the pharmaceutical industry. We tested the ability of trehalose in protecting R-Phycoerythrin (R-PE), a pigment-protein complex widely used as fluorescent marker, from thermal denaturation. Once embedded into a dried trehalose matrix, R-PE retains its optical absorption-emission characteristics even when exposed to 70°C for h or when subjected to freeze-drying. We subsequently examined the protection exerted by trehalose on freeze-dried antihuman CD8-RPE (CD8-RPE) conjugated antibodies. Flow cytometric analysis showed that colyophilized trehalose-CD8-RPE preparations can be exposed for 4 weeks at 45°C without significant loss of functionality. Remarkably, even following 4 weeks incubation at 70°C, the preparations are still able to specifically recognize CD8(+) lymphocyte populations. These results show that colyophilization with trehalose makes possible the preparation of antibody-based diagnostic kits which can withstand breaks in the "cold chain" distribution, particularly suited for use in less-developed countries of the tropical areas. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 12/2012; · 3.06 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Following light-induced electron transfer between the primary donor (P) and quinone acceptor (Q(A)) the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (RC) undergoes conformational relaxations which stabilize the primary charge separated state P(+)Q(A)(-). Dehydration of RCs from Rhodobacter sphaeroides hinders these conformational dynamics, leading to acceleration of P(+)Q(A)(-) recombination kinetics [Malferrari et al., J. Phys. Chem. B 115 (2011) 14732-14750]. To clarify the structural basis of the conformational relaxations and the involvement of bound water molecules, we analyzed light-induced P(+)Q(A)(-)/PQ(A) difference FTIR spectra of RC films at two hydration levels (relative humidity r=76% and r=11%). Dehydration reduced the amplitude of bands in the 3700-3550cm(-1) region, attributed to water molecules hydrogen bonded to the RC, previously proposed to stabilize the charge separation by dielectric screening [Iwata et al., Biochemistry 48 (2009) 1220-1229]. Other features of the FTIR difference spectrum were affected by partial depletion of the hydration shell (r=11%), including contributions from modes of P (9-keto groups), and from NH or OH stretching modes of amino acidic residues, absorbing in the 3550-3150cm(-1) range, a region so far not examined in detail for bacterial RCs. To probe in parallel the effects of dehydration on the RC conformational relaxations, we analyzed by optical absorption spectroscopy the kinetics of P(+)Q(A)(-) recombination following the same photoexcitation used in FTIR measurements (20s continuous illumination). The results suggest a correlation between the observed FTIR spectral changes and the conformational rearrangements which, in the hydrated system, strongly stabilize the P(+)Q(A)(-) charge separated state over the second time scale.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 10/2012; · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We report on the relationship between electron transfer, conformational dynamics, and hydration in photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The kinetics of electron transfer from the photoreduced quinone acceptor (Q(A)(-)) to the photo-oxidized primary donor (P(+)), a charge recombination process sensitive to the conformational dynamics of the RC, has been analyzed at room temperature in dehydrated RC-detergent films as a function of the residual water content under controlled relative humidity (r). The hydration level was evaluated by FTIR spectroscopy from the area of the combination band of water (5155 cm(-1)). Sorption isotherms fit the Hailwood and Horrobin model and indicate a significant contribution to hydration of the detergent belt surrounding the RC. Spectral analysis of the water combination and association (2130 cm(-1)) bands suggests strong rearrangements in the hydrogen-bonding organization upon depletion of the hydration shell of the complex. In parallel with these changes, following dehydration below a critical threshold (r approximately equal 40%), the kinetics of P(+)Q(A)(-) recombination become progressively faster and distributed in rate. When r is decreased from 40% to 10% the average rate constant (k) increases from 15 to 40 s(-1), mimicking the behavior of the hydrated system at cryogenic temperatures. We infer that extensive dehydration inhibits dramatically the relaxation from the dark- to the light-adapted conformation of the RC as well as interconversion among lower tier conformational substates. The RC dynamics probed by P(+)Q(A)(-) recombination appear therefore controlled by the thermal fluctuations of the hydration shell. At r < 10% an additional, much faster ((k) approximately equal 3000 s(-1)) kinetic phase of P(+)Q(A)(-) recombination is observed. We suggest such a fast recombination arises from removal of a pool of RC-bound water molecules which are essential to stabilize the primary charge-separated state at physiological conditions.
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 12/2011; 115(49):14732-50. · 3.70 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex (cyt bc(1)) plays a major role in the electrogenic extrusion of protons across the membrane responsible for the proton motive force to produce ATP. Proton-coupled electron transfer underlying the catalysis of cyt bc(1) is generally accepted, but the molecular basis of coupling and associated proton efflux pathway(s) remains unclear. Herein we studied Zn(2+)-induced inhibition of Rhodobacter capsulatus cyt bc(1) using enzyme kinetics, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and electrochemically induced Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy with the purpose of understanding the Zn(2+) binding mechanism and its inhibitory effect on cyt bc(1) function. Analogous studies were conducted with a mutant of cyt b, E295, a residue previously proposed to bind Zn(2+) on the basis of extended X-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy. ITC analysis indicated that mutation of E295 to valine, a noncoordinating residue, results in a decrease in Zn(2+) binding affinity. The kinetic study showed that wild-type cyt bc(1) and its E295V mutant have similar levels of apparent K(m) values for decylbenzohydroquinone as a substrate (4.9 ± 0.2 and 3.1 ± 0.4 μM, respectively), whereas their K(I) values for Zn(2+) are 8.3 and 38.5 μM, respectively. The calorimetry-based K(D) values for the high-affinity site of cyt bc(1) are on the same order of magnitude as the K(I) values derived from the kinetic analysis. Furthermore, the FTIR signal of protonated acidic residues was perturbed in the presence of Zn(2+), whereas the E295V mutant exhibited no significant change in electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectra measured in the presence and absence of Zn(2+). Our overall results indicate that the proton-active E295 residue near the Q(o) site of cyt bc(1) can bind directly to Zn(2+), resulting in a decrease in the electron transferring activity without changing drastically the redox potentials of the cofactors of the enzyme. We conclude that E295 is involved in proton efflux coupled to electron transfer at the Q(o) site of cyt bc(1).
Biochemistry 05/2011; 50(20):4263-72. · 3.42 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The coupling between electron transfer (ET) and the conformational dynamics of the cofactor−protein complex in photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides in water/glycerol solutions or embedded in dehydrated poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) films or trehalose glasses is reported. Matrix effects were studied by time-resolved 95 GHz high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at room (290 K) and low (150 K) temperature. ET from the photoreduced quinone acceptor (QA•−) to the photo-oxidized donor (P865•+) is strongly matrix-dependent at room temperature: In the trehalose glasses, the recombination kinetics of P865•+QA•−, probed by EPR and optical spectroscopies, is faster and broadly distributed as compared to that of RCs in solution, reflecting the inhibition of the RC relaxation from the dark- to the light-adapted conformational substate and the hindrance of substate interconversion. Similarly accelerated kinetics was observed also in PVA at a water-to-RC molar ratio 10-fold lower than in trehalose. Despite the matrix dependence of the ET kinetics, continuous-wave (cw) EPR and electron spin echo (ESE) analyses of the photogenerated P865•+ and QA•− radical ions and P865•+QA•− radical pairs do not reveal significant matrix effects, at either 290 or 150 K, indicating no change in the molecular radical-pair configuration of the P865•+ and QA•− cofactors. Furthermore, the field dependences of the transverse relaxation times T2 of QA•− essentially coincide in trehalose and PVA at 290 K. T2 is similar in these two matrixes and in the glycerol/water system at 150 K, implying that the librational dynamics of QA•− are also unaffected by the matrix. We infer that the relative geometry of the primary donor and acceptor, as well as the local dynamics and hydrogen bonding of QA in its binding pocket, are not involved in the stabilization of P865•+QA•−. We suggest that the RC relaxation occurs rather by changes throughout the protein/solvent system. The control of the RC dynamics and ET by the environment is discussed, particularly with respect to the extraordinary efficacy of trehalose matrixes in restricting the RC motional degrees of freedom at elevated temperatures.
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 10/2010; 114(39):12729-43. · 3.70 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Transhydrogenase couples hydride transfer between NADH and NADP(+) to proton translocation across a membrane. The binding of Zn(2+) to the enzyme was shown previously to inhibit steps associated with proton transfer. Using Zn K-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS), we report here on the local structure of Zn(2+) bound to Escherichia coli transhydrogenase. Experiments were performed on wild-type enzyme and a mutant in which betaHis91 was replaced by Lys (betaH91K). This well-conserved His residue, located in the membrane-spanning domain of the protein, has been suggested to function in proton transfer, and to act as a ligand of the inhibitory Zn(2+). The XAFS analysis has identified a Zn(2+)-binding cluster formed by one Cys, two His, and one Asp/Glu residue, arranged in a tetrahedral geometry. The structure of the site is consistent with the notion that Zn(2+) inhibits proton translocation by competing with H(+) binding to the His residues. The same cluster of residues with very similar bond lengths best fits the spectra of wild-type transhydrogenase and betaH91K. Evidently, betaHis91 is not directly involved in Zn(2+) binding. The locus of betaHis91 and that of the Zn-binding site, although both on (or close to) the proton-transfer pathway of transhydrogenase, are spatially separate.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 04/2010; 1797(4):494-500. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In the present work a data analysis approach, based on XAFS data, is proposed for the identification of most probable binding motifs of unknown mononuclear zinc sites in metalloproteins. This approach combines multiple-scattering EXAFS analysis performed within the rigid-body refinement scheme, non-muffin-tin ab initio XANES simulations, average structural information on amino acids and metal binding clusters provided by the Protein Data Bank, and Debye-Waller factor calculations based on density functional theory. The efficiency of the method is tested by using three reference zinc proteins for which the local structure around the metal is already known from protein crystallography. To show the applicability of the present analysis to structures not deposited in the Protein Data Bank, the XAFS spectra of six mononuclear zinc binding sites present in diverse membrane proteins, for which we have previously proposed the coordinating amino acids by applying a similar approach, is also reported. By comparing the Zn K-edge XAFS features exhibited by these proteins with those pertaining to the reference structures, key spectral characteristics, related to specific binding motifs, are observed. These case studies exemplify the combined data analysis proposed and further support its validity.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation 01/2010; 17(1):41-52. · 2.73 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The coupling between electron transfer and protein dynamics has been investigated in reaction centers (RCs) from the wild type (wt) and the carotenoid-less strain R26 of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Recombination kinetics between the primary photoreduced quinone acceptor (QA-) and photoxidized donor (P+) have been analyzed at room temperature in RCs incorporated into glassy trehalose matrices of different water/sugar ratios. As previously found in R26 RCs, also in the wt RC, upon matrix dehydration, P+QA- recombination accelerates and becomes broadly distributed, reflecting the inhibition of protein relaxation from the dark-adapted to the light-adapted conformation and the hindrance of interconversion between conformational substates. While in wet trehalose matrices (down to approximately one water per trehalose molecule) P+QA- recombination kinetics are essentially coincident in wt and R26 RCs, more extensive dehydration leads to two-times faster and more distributed kinetics in the carotenoid-containing RC, indicating a stronger inhibition of the internal protein dynamics in the wt RC. Coarse-grained Brownian dynamics simulations performed on the two RC structures reveal a markedly larger flexibility of the R26 RC, showing that a rigid core of residues, close to the quinone acceptors, is specifically softened in the absence of the carotenoid. These experimental and computational results concur to indicate that removal of the carotenoid molecule has long-range effects on protein dynamics and that the structural/dynamical coupling between the protein and the glassy matrix depends strongly upon the local mechanical properties of the protein interior. The data also suggest that the conformational change stabilizing P+QA- is localized around the QA binding pocket.
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 08/2009; 113(30):10389-98. · 3.70 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Trehalose is a nonreducing disaccharide of glucose found in organisms, which can survive adverse conditions such as extreme drought and high temperatures. Furthermore, isolated structures, as enzymes or liposomes, embedded in trehalose are preserved against stressing conditions [see, e.g., Crowe, L. M. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 2002, 131, 505-513]. Among other hypotheses, such protective effect has been suggested to stem, in the case of proteins, from the formation of a water-mediated, hydrogen bond network, which anchors the protein surface to the water-sugar matrix, thus coupling the internal degrees of freedom of the biomolecule to those of the surroundings [Giuffrida, S.; et al. J. Phys. Chem. B 2003, 107, 13211-13217]. Analogous protective effect is also accomplished by other saccharides, although with a lower efficiency. Here, we studied the recombination kinetics of the primary, light-induced charge separated state (P(+)Q(A)(-)) and the thermal stability of the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides in trehalose-water and in sucrose-water matrixes of decreasing water content. Our data show that, in sucrose, at variance with trehalose, the system undergoes a "nanophase separation" when the water/sugar mole fraction is lower than the threshold level approximately 0.8. We rationalize this result assuming that the hydrogen bond network, which anchors the RC surface to its surrounding, is formed in trehalose but not in sucrose. We suggest that both the couplings, in the case of trehalose, and the nanophase separation, in the case of sucrose, start at low water content when the components of the system enter in competition for the residual water.
Journal of the American Chemical Society 08/2008; 130(31):10240-6. · 9.91 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We report on the x-ray absorption fine structure of the Fe(2+) site in photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Crystallographic studies show that Fe(2+) is ligated with four N(epsilon) atoms from four histidine (His) residues and two O(epsilon) atoms from a Glu residue. By considering multiple scattering contributions to the x-ray absorption fine structure function, we improved the structural resolution of the site: His residues were split into two groups, characterized by different Fe-N(epsilon) distances, and two distinct Fe-O(epsilon) bond lengths resolved. The effect of the environment was studied by embedding the reaction centers into a polyvinyl alcohol film and into a dehydrated trehalose matrix. Incorporation into trehalose caused elongation in one of the two Fe-N(epsilon) distances, and in one Fe-O(epsilon) bond length, compared with the polyvinyl alcohol film. The asymmetry detected in the cluster of His residues and its response to incorporation into trehalose are ascribed to the hydrogen bonds between two His residues and the quinone acceptors. The structural distortions observed in the trehalose matrix indicate a strong interaction between the reaction-centers surface and the water-trehalose matrix, which propagates deeply into the interior of the protein. The absence of matrix effects on the Debye-Waller factors is brought back to the static heterogeneity and rigidity of the ligand cluster.
Biophysical Journal 08/2008; 95(2):814-22. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We report on the effects of water activity and surrounding viscosity on electron transfer reactions taking place within a membrane protein: the reaction center (RC) from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We measured the kinetics of charge recombination between the primary photoxidized donor (P(+)) and the reduced quinone acceptors. Water activity (aW) and viscosity (eta) have been tuned by changing the concentration of cosolutes (trehalose, sucrose, glucose, and glycerol) and the temperature. The temperature dependence of the rate of charge recombination between the reduced primary quinone, Q(A)(-), and P(+) was found to be unaffected by the presence of cosolutes. At variance, the kinetics of charge recombination between the reduced secondary quinone (Q(B)(-)) and P(+) was found to be severely influenced by the presence of cosolutes and by the temperature. Results collected over a wide eta-range (2 orders of magnitude) demonstrate that the rate of P(+)Q(B)(-) recombination is uncorrelated to the solution viscosity. The kinetics of P(+)Q(B)(-) recombination depends on the P(+)Q(A)(-)Q(B) <--> P(+)Q(A)Q(B)(-) equilibrium constant. Accordingly, the dependence of the interquinone electron transfer equilibrium constant on T and aW has been explained by assuming that the transfer of one electron from Q(A)(-) to Q(B) is associated with the release of about three water molecules by the RC. This implies that the interquinone electron transfer involves at least two RC substates differing in the stoichiometry of interacting water molecules.
Journal of the American Chemical Society 08/2008; 130(29):9353-63. · 9.91 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The metal content of bovine NADH-Q oxidoreductase determined by inductively-coupled plasma atomic-emission spectroscopy reveals the presence of about one atom of zinc per molecule of flavin mononucleotide. We applied Zn K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (EXAFS) to investigate the local structure of the bound zinc ion and to identify the nature of the coordinating residues. The EXAFS spectrum is consistent with a structured zinc binding site. By combining information from first-shell analysis and from metalloprotein data bases putative binding clusters have been built and fitted to the experimental spectrum using ab initio simulations. The best fitting binding cluster is formed by two histidine and two cysteine residues arranged in a tetrahedral geometry.
FEBS Letters 01/2008; 581(29):5645-8. · 3.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The core complex formed by the reaction center and the light harvesting complex 1 (RC-LH1) was purified from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We analyzed the lipid and ubiquinone (UQ) complements copurifying with the RC-LH1 complex and with the peripheral antenna (LH2). In RC-LH1 UQ was almost ten times more concentrated than in the LH2 and in the native membranes from which the complexes were extracted. The fractional lipid composition of the RC-LH1 complex also differed from that of the intact membranes, exhibiting a marked increase in cardiolipin concentration. We propose that the confinement of cardiolipin and ubiquinone observed within the RC-LH1 complex, plays a role in vivo in the stabilization of the light-induced charge separation catalyzed by the RC.
The Italian journal of biochemistry 01/2008; 56(4):259-64.
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ABSTRACT: The density distribution of photosynthetic membrane vesicles (chromatophores) from Rhodobacter capsulatus has been studied by isopicnic centrifugation. The average vesicle diameters, examined by electron microscopy, varied between 61 and 72 nm in different density fractions (70 nm in unfractionated chromatophores). The ATP synthase catalytic activities showed maxima displaced toward the higher density fractions relative to bacteriochlorophyll, resulting in higher specific activities in those fractions (about threefold). The amount of ATP synthase, measured by quantitative Western blotting, paralleled the catalytic activities. The average number of ATP synthases per chromatophore, evaluated on the basis of the Western blotting data and of vesicle density analysis, ranged between 8 and 13 (10 in unfractionated chromatophores). Poisson distribution analysis indicated that the probability of chromatophores devoid of ATP synthase was negligible. The effects of ATP synthase inhibition by efrapeptin on the time course of the transmembrane electric potential (evaluated as carotenoid electrochromic response) and on ATP synthesis were studied comparatively. The ATP produced after a flash and the total charge associated with the proton flow coupled to ATP synthesis were more resistant to efrapeptin than the initial value of the phosphorylating currents, indicating that several ATP synthases are fed by protons from the same vesicle.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 12/2007; 1767(11):1340-52. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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Lisa Giachini, Francesco Francia,
Giulia Veronesi,
Dong-Woo Lee,
Fevzi Daldal,
Li-Shar Huang,
Edward A Berry,
Tiziana Cocco,
Sergio Papa,
Federico Boscherini,
Giovanni Venturoli
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ABSTRACT: Binding of Zn2+ has been shown previously to inhibit the ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc1 complex). X-ray diffraction data in Zn-treated crystals of the avian cyt bc1 complex identified two binding sites located close to the catalytic Qo site of the enzyme. One of them (Zn01) might interfere with the egress of protons from the Qo site to the aqueous phase. Using Zn K-edge x-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy, we report here on the local structure of Zn2+ bound stoichiometrically to noncrystallized cyt bc1 complexes. We performed a comparative x-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy study by examining avian, bovine, and bacterial enzymes. A large number of putative clusters, built by combining information from first-shell analysis and metalloprotein databases, were fitted to the experimental spectra by using ab initio simulations. This procedure led us to identify the binding clusters with high levels of confidence. In both the avian and bovine enzyme, a tetrahedral ligand cluster formed by two His, one Lys, and one carboxylic residue was found, and this ligand attribution fit the crystallographic Zn01 location of the avian enzyme. In the chicken enzyme, the ligands were the His121, His268, Lys270, and Asp253 residues, and in the homologous bovine enzyme they were the His121, His267, Lys269, and Asp254 residues. Zn2+ bound to the bacterial cyt bc1 complex exhibited quite different spectral features, consistent with a coordination number of 6. The best-fit octahedral cluster was formed by one His, two carboxylic acids, one Gln or Asn residue, and two water molecules. It was interesting that by aligning the crystallographic structures of the bacterial and avian enzymes, this group of residues was found located in the region homologous to that of the Zn01 site. This cluster included the His276, Asp278, Glu295, and Asn279 residues of the cyt b subunit. The conserved location of the Zn2+ binding sites at the entrance of the putative proton release pathways, and the presence of His residues point to a common mechanism of inhibition. As previously shown for the photosynthetic bacterial reaction center, zinc would compete with protons for binding to the His residues, thus impairing their function as proton donors/acceptors.
Biophysical Journal 11/2007; 93(8):2934-51. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The reaction center-light harvesting complex 1 (RC-LH1) purified from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides has been studied with respect to the kinetics of charge recombination and to the phospholipid and ubiquinone (UQ) complements tightly associated with it. In the antenna-RC complexes, at 6.5<pH<9.0, P(+)Q(B)(-) recombines with a pH independent average rate constant more than three times smaller than that measured in LH1-deprived RCs. At increasing pH values, for which increases, the deceleration observed in RC-LH1 complexes is reduced, vanishing at pH >11.0. In both systems kinetics are described by a continuous rate distribution, which broadens at pH >9.5, revealing a strong kinetic heterogeneity, more pronounced in the RC-LH1 complex. In the presence of the antenna the Q(A)Q(B)(-) state is stabilized by about 40 meV at 6.5<pH<9.0, while it is destabilized at pH >11. The phospholipid/RC and UQ/RC ratios have been compared in chromatophore membranes, in RC-LH1 complexes and in the isolated peripheral antenna (LH2). The UQ concentration in the lipid phase of the RC-LH1 complexes is about one order of magnitude larger than the average concentration in chromatophores and in LH2 complexes. Following detergent washing RC-LH1 complexes retain 80-90 phospholipid and 10-15 ubiquinone molecules per monomer. The fractional composition of the lipid domain tightly bound to the RC-LH1 (determined by TLC and (31)P-NMR) differs markedly from that of chromatophores and of the peripheral antenna. The content of cardiolipin, close to 10% weight in chromatophores and LH2 complexes, becomes dominant in the RC-LH1 complexes. We propose that the quinone and cardiolipin confinement observed in core complexes reflects the in vivo heterogeneous distributions of these components. Stabilization of the charge separated state in the RC-LH1 complexes is tentatively ascribed to local electrostatic perturbations due to cardiolipin.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 08/2007; 1767(8):1041-56. · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We report on the structure and dynamics of the Fe ligand cluster of reduced horse heart cytochrome c in solution, in a dried polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) film, and in two trehalose matrices characterized by different contents of residual water. The effect of the solvent/matrix environment was studied at room temperature using Fe K-edge x-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy. XAFS data were analyzed by combining ab initio simulations and multi-parameter fitting in an attempt to disentangle structural from disorder parameters. Essentially the same structural and disorder parameters account adequately for the XAFS spectra measured in solution, both in the absence and in the presence of glycerol, and in the PVA film, showing that this polymer interacts weakly with the embedded protein. Instead, incorporation in trehalose leads to severe structural changes, more prominent in the more dried matrix, consisting of 1), an increase up to 0.2 A of the distance between Fe and the imidazole N atom of the coordinating histidine residue and 2), an elongation up to 0.16 A of the distance between Fe and the fourth-shell C atoms of the heme pyrrolic units. These structural distortions are accompanied by a substantial decrease of the relative mean-square displacements of the first ligands. In the extensively dried trehalose matrix, extremely low values of the Debye Waller factors are obtained for the pyrrolic and for the imidazole N atoms. This finding is interpreted as reflecting a drastic hindering in the relative motions of the Fe ligand cluster atoms and an impressive decrease in the static disorder of the local Fe structure. It appears, therefore, that the dried trehalose matrix dramatically perturbs the energy landscape of cytochrome c, giving rise, at the level of local structure, to well-resolved structural distortions and restricting the ensemble of accessible conformational substates.
Biophysical Journal 03/2007; 92(4):1350-60. · 3.65 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The highly toxic oxyanion tellurite (TeO3(2-)) is a well known pro-oxidant in mammalian and bacterial cells. This work examines the effects of tellurite on the redox state of the electron transport chain of the facultative phototroph Rhodobacter capsulatus, in relation to the role of the thiol:disulfide oxidoreductase DsbB. Under steady-state respiration, the addition of tellurite (2.5 mM) to membrane fragments generated an extrareduction of the cytochrome pool (c- and b-type hemes); further, in plasma membranes exposed to tellurite (0.25 to 2.5 mM) and subjected to a series of flashes of light, the rate of the QH2:cytochrome c (Cyt c) oxidoreductase activity was enhanced. The effect of tellurite was blocked by the antibiotics antimycin A and/or myxothiazol, specific inhibitors of the QH2:Cyt c oxidoreductase, and, most interestingly, the membrane-associated thiol:disulfide oxidoreductase DsbB was required to mediate the redox unbalance produced by the oxyanion. Indeed, this phenomenon was absent from R. capsulatus MD22, a DsbB-deficient mutant, whereas the tellurite effect was present in membranes from MD22/pDsbB(WT), in which the mutant gene was complemented to regain the wild-type DsbB phenotype. These findings were taken as evidence that the membrane-bound thiol:disulfide oxidoreductase DsbB acts as an "electron conduit" between the hydrophilic metalloid and the lipid-embedded Q pool, so that in habitats contaminated with subinhibitory amounts of Te(IV), the metalloid is likely to function as a disposal for the excess reducing power at the Q-pool level of facultative phototrophic bacteria.
Journal of Bacteriology 03/2007; 189(3):851-9. · 3.83 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: EXAFS analysis of Zn binding site(s) in bovine-heart cytochrome c oxidase and characterization of the inhibitory effect of internal zinc on respiratory activity and proton pumping of the liposome reconstituted oxidase are presented. EXAFS identifies tetrahedral coordination site(s) for Zn(2+) with two N-histidine imidazoles, one N-histidine imidazol or N-lysine and one O-COOH (glutamate or aspartate), possibly located at the entry site of the proton conducting D pathway in the oxidase and involved in inhibition of the oxygen reduction catalysis and proton pumping by internally trapped zinc.
FEBS Letters 03/2007; 581(4):611-6. · 3.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In the widely studied purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, a small transmembrane protein, named PufX, is required for photosynthetic growth and is involved in the supramolecular dimeric organization of the core complex. We performed a structural and functional analysis of the photosynthetic apparatus of Rhodobacter veldkampii, a related species which evolved independently. Time-resolved optical spectroscopy of R. veldkampii chromatophores showed that the reaction center shares with R. sphaeroides spectral and redox properties and interacts with a cytochrome bc(1) complex through a Q-cycle mechanism. Kinetic analysis of flash-induced cytochrome b(561) reduction indicated a fast delivery of the reduced quinol produced by the reaction center to the cytochrome bc(1) complex. A core complex, along with two light-harvesting LH2 complexes significantly different in size, was purified and analyzed by sedimentation, size exclusion chromatography, mass spectroscopy, and electron microscopy. A PufX subunit identified by MALDI-TOF was found to be associated with the core complex. However, as shown by sedimentation and single-particle analysis by electron microscopy, the core complex is monomeric, suggesting that in R. veldkampii, PufX is involved in the photosynthetic growth but is unable to induce the dimerization of the core complex.
Biochemistry 10/2006; 45(35):10512-20. · 3.42 Impact Factor