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Electron transfer , photosynthetic reaction rate constants

Figure 4-7. Electronic factors in the rate constant calculated for the electron transfers in the bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers of (a) Rhodopseudomonas viridis, and (b) Rhodobactor sphaeroides... Figure 4-7. Electronic factors in the rate constant calculated for the electron transfers in the bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers of (a) Rhodopseudomonas viridis, and (b) Rhodobactor sphaeroides...
A microscopic theory for describing ultrafast radiationless transitions in particular for, photo-induced ultrafast radiationless transitions is presented. For this purpose, one example system that well represents the ultrafast radiationless transaction problem is considered. More specifically, bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) are investigated for their ultrafast electronic-excitation energy transfer (EET) processes and ultrafast electron transfer (ET) processes. Several applications of the density matrix method are presented for emphasizing that the density matrix method can not only treat the dynamics due to the radiationless transitions but also deal with the population and coherence dynamics. Several rate constants of the radiationless transitions and the analytic estimation methods of those rate... [Pg.183]

The primary photosynthetic process is carried out by a pigment protein complex the reaction centre (RC) embedded in a lipid bilayer membrane (Figure 6.19) and surrounded by light-harvesting complexes.1477,1481,1482 Thus energy is transferred from LH1 to a bacteriochlorophyll special pair (P) and then through a bacteriochlorophyll molecule (BC monomer) to bacteriopheophytin (BP a chlorophyll molecule lacking the central Mg2 + ion), followed by electron transfer to a quinone Qa in hundreds of ps. The neutral P is then restored by electron transfer from the nearest intermembrane space protein cytochrome c (Cyt c) in hundreds of ns. The rate constants of the... [Pg.427]

Early reports on interactions between redox enzymes and ruthenium or osmium compounds prior to the biosensor burst are hidden in a bulk of chemical and biochemical literature. This does not apply to the ruthenium biochemistry of cytochromes where complexes [Ru(NH3)5L] " , [Ru(bpy)2L2], and structurally related ruthenium compounds, which have been widely used in studies of intramolecular (long-range) electron transfer in proteins (124,156-158) and biomimetic models for the photosynthetic reaction centers (159). Applications of these compounds in biosensors are rather limited. The complex [Ru(NHg)6] has the correct redox potential but its reactivity toward oxidoreductases is low reflecting a low self-exchange rate constant (see Tables I and VII). The redox potentials of complexes [Ru(bpy)3] " and [Ru(phen)3] are way too much anodic (1.25 V vs. NHE) ruling out applications in MET. The complex [Ru(bpy)3] is such a powerful oxidant that it oxidizes HRP into Compounds II and I (160). The electron-transfer from the resting state of HRP at pH <10 when the hemin iron(III) is five-coordinate generates a 7i-cation radical intermediate with the rate constant 2.5 x 10 s" (pH 10.3)... [Pg.239]

Equilibrium constants between redox carriers are easily computed from their midpoint potentials, determined by conventional redox titrations. Equilibrium constants may be also determined in situ by measuring the redox state of the carriers, either in the dark or in conditions where the rate of the photosynthetic process is light-limited. Surprisingly enough, the value of the apparent equilibrium constants of electron transfer reactions between the primary PSII acceptor and the primary PSI donor measured in the absence of mediators [1,2] was found much lower than expected from the redox potential titrations. The equilibrium constants were slowly increasing during a dark adaptation of several minutes. No satisfying interpretation has been proposed for these paradoxical results. [Pg.2144]

Figure 9.21 Distance-dependence of rate constants for electron transfer in some protein systems. This plot shows the distance-dependence of the rate constant (optimised) for electron transfer between donor and acceptor atoms A and B on the distance between them, in protein systems of two types, (a) reaction centres in photosynthetic bacteria (o, ) and (b) ruthenated proteins (A, A). Diagram from Ref. [35]. See text. Figure 9.21 Distance-dependence of rate constants for electron transfer in some protein systems. This plot shows the distance-dependence of the rate constant (optimised) for electron transfer between donor and acceptor atoms A and B on the distance between them, in protein systems of two types, (a) reaction centres in photosynthetic bacteria (o, ) and (b) ruthenated proteins (A, A). Diagram from Ref. [35]. See text.

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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.31 , Pg.32 , Pg.33 ]




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Electron photosynthetic

Electron rate constants

Electron reaction rates

Electron transfer rate constants

Electron transfer reactions, rate

Electron-transfer reactions constants

Photosynthetic reactions

Rate constant electron-transfer reactions

Reaction rate constant

Reaction rate electron transfer reactions

Transfer rate

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