Correlation of Proton Release and Electrochromic Shifts of the Optical Spectrum Due to Oxidation of Tyrosine in Reaction Centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides

Reaction centers from the YL167 mutant of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, containing a highly oxidizing bacteriochlorophyll dimer and a tyrosine residue substituted at Phe L167, were compared to reaction centers from the YM mutant, with a tyrosine at M164, and a quadruple mutant containing a highly oxidizi...

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Published inBiochemistry (Easton) Vol. 42; no. 45; pp. 13280 - 13286
Main Authors Kálmán, L, LoBrutto, R, Narváez, A. J, Williams, J. C, Allen, J. P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 18.11.2003
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Summary:Reaction centers from the YL167 mutant of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, containing a highly oxidizing bacteriochlorophyll dimer and a tyrosine residue substituted at Phe L167, were compared to reaction centers from the YM mutant, with a tyrosine at M164, and a quadruple mutant containing a highly oxidizing dimer but no nearby tyrosine residue. Distinctive features in the light-induced optical and EPR spectra showed that the oxidized bacteriochlorophyll dimer was reduced by Tyr L167 in the YL167 mutant, resulting in a tyrosyl radical, as has been found for Tyr M164 in the YM mutant. In the YL167 mutant, the net proton uptake after formation of the tyrosyl radical and the reduced primary quinone ranged from +0.1 to +0.3 H+/reaction center between pH 6 and pH 10, with a dependence that is similar to the quadruple mutant but different than the large proton release observed in the YM mutant. In the light-induced absorption spectrum in the 700−1000 nm region, the YL167 mutant exhibited unique changes that can be assigned as arising primarily from an approximately 30 nm blue shift of the dimer absorption band. The optical signals in the YL167 mutant were pH dependent, with a pK a value of approximately 8.7, indicating that the tyrosyl radical is stabilized at high pH. The results are modeled by assuming that the phenolic proton of Tyr L167 is trapped in the protein after oxidation of the tyrosine, resulting in electrostatic interactions with the tetrapyrroles and nearby residues.
Bibliography:This work was supported by Grant MCB 0131764 from the NSF.
ark:/67375/TPS-ZKFZPH96-K
istex:43118F4988B160DDC4B512671CF955DB76CECFA3
ISSN:0006-2960
1520-4995
DOI:10.1021/bi034970l