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“Introduction Pigment–protein complexes in photosynthetic organisms convert light energy into chemical energy. In purple anoxygenic bacteria, reaction centers (RCs) embedded in the membrane perform the primary photochemistry (Blankenship et al. 1995). The RC from Rhodobacter sphaeroides consists of three protein subunits and several cofactors (see e.g., Allen et al. 1987; Yeates et al. 1988; Ermler et al. 1994; Stowell et al. 1997; Camara-Artigas et al. 2002). The core L and M subunits surround the cofactors that are divided into two distinct branches related by an approximate two-fold symmetry axis that runs from the center of P to the non-heme iron (Fig. 1).