Abstract
Reaction centers (RCs) fromRhodopseudomonas sphaeroides were reconstituted into asolectin vesicles by cosonication. Equilibrium centrifugation on sucrose gradients showed that the vesicles were homogeneous in density (i.e., lipid-to-protein ratio) when reconstituted at a molar lipid-to-protein ratio between 500 to 1000. At lower ratios, a considerable fraction of RCs was not incorporated into closed vesicles, while at higher ratios, an increasing population of liposomes was protein-free. The average vesicle size decreased with increasing lipid-to-protein ratio, exhibiting considerable size heterogeneity within a sample. The average diameter of the largest and smallest population of vesicles, reconstituted at a molar lipid-to-protein ratio of 560, was 1200 and 400 nm, respectively. The orientation of reconstituted RCs with respect to the plane of the membrane was determined from the flash-induced rereduction kinetics of the special-pair bacteriochlorophyll dimer in the presence of reduced cytochromec. The predominant orientation of RCs was such that the cytochromec binding sites faced the external medium. The net orientation of RCs in reconstituted vesicles decreased with vesicle size and was strongly influenced by the ionic strength during reconstitution.

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