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RCI-type photosystems

B. The Fa/Fb-Binding Subunit of RCI-Type Photosystems 1. Global Structure and Differences between Species... [Pg.338]

Whereas the 2[4Fe-4S] ferredoxin may have been replaced by the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins in oxygenic photosynthesis, another 2[4Fe-4S] protein, the so-called FA/FB-binding subunit (see Fig. 1), appears to be common to all RCI-type photosystems. [Pg.338]

The observation of a photosynthetic reaction center in green sulfur bacteria dates back to 1963.39 Green sulfur bacteria RCs are of the type I or the Fe-S-type (photosystem I). Here the electron acceptor is not the quinine instead, chlorophyll molecules (BChl 663, 81 -OII-Chi a, or Chi a) serve as primary electron acceptors, and three Fe4S4 centers (ferredoxins) serve as secondary acceptors. A quinone molecule may or may not serve as an intermediate carrier between the primary electron acceptor (Chi) and the secondary acceptor (Fe-S centers).40 The process sequence leading to the energy conversion in RCI is shown in Figure 21. [Pg.32]

Cluster Fx was also identified via its EPR spectral features in the RCI photosystem from green sulfur bacteria 31, 32) and the cluster binding motif was subsequently found in the gene sequence 34 ) of the (single) subunit of the homodimeric reaction center core (for a review, see 54, 55)). Whereas the same sequence motif is present in the RCI from heliobacteria (50), no EPR evidence for the presence of an iron-sulfur cluster related to Fx has been obtained. There are, however, indications from time-resolved optical spectroscopy for the involvement of an Fx-type center in electron transfer through the heliobacterial RC 56). [Pg.344]

We have seen the Z-scheme for the two photosystems in green-plant photosynthesis and the electron carriers in these photosystems. We have also described how the photosystems of green plants and photosynthetic bacteria all appear to function with basically the same sort ofmechanisms of energy transfer, primary charge separation, electron transfer, charge stabilization, etc., yet the molecular constituents of the two reaction centers in green plants, in particular, are quite different from each other. Photosystem I contains iron-sulfur proteins as electron acceptors and may thus be called the iron-sulfur (FeS) type reaction center, while photosystem 11 contains pheophytin as the primary electron acceptor and quinones as the secondary acceptors and may thus be called the pheophytin-quinone (0 Q) type. These two types of reaction centers have also been called RCI and RCII types, respectively. [Pg.41]


See other pages where RCI-type photosystems is mentioned: [Pg.335]    [Pg.345]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.345]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.44]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.337 , Pg.338 , Pg.339 , Pg.340 , Pg.341 , Pg.342 ]




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