A three-dimensional model of the dimeric reaction center-light harvesting I-PufX (RC-LH1-PufX) complex from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, calculated from electron microscope single particle analysis of negatively stained complexes, shows that the two halves of the dimer molecule incline toward each other on the periplasmic side, creating a remarkable V-shaped structure. The distribution of negative stain is consistent with loose packing of the LH1 ring near the 14th LH1 ␣/ pair, which could facilitate the migration of quinone and quinol molecules across the LH1 boundary. The three-dimensional model encloses a space near the reaction center Q B site and the 14th LH1 ␣/ pair, which is ϳ20 Å in diameter, sufficient to sequester a quinone pool. Helical arrays of dimers were used to construct a three-dimensional membrane model, which matches the packing lattice deduced from electron microscope analysis of the tubular dimer-only membranes found in mutants of Rba. sphaeroides lacking the LH2 complex. The intrinsic curvature of the dimer explains the shape and ϳ70-nm diameter of these membrane tubules, and at least partially accounts for the spherical membrane invaginations found in wild-type Rba. sphaeroides. A model of dimer aggregation and membrane curvature in these spherical membrane invaginations is presented.Photosynthetic bacteria provide an ideal system for investigating the conversion of light energy into chemical energy in nature. Only three different protein complexes are required for this conversion; the first is a so-called "core" complex composed of light-harvesting I (LH1) and reaction center (RC) complexes. Light energy absorbed by LH1 is transferred to the RC, where photochemical charge separation takes place (1, 2). This charge separation induces electron transfer coupled to production and migration of quinols to the cytochrome bc 1 complex (3, 4). Pumping of protons across the membrane forms an electrochemical potential, which drives various cellular processes including synthesis of ATP (5). Most of the purple bacteria contain a second light-harvesting complex, LH2; each subunit of LH2 consists of two integral transmembrane polypeptides called ␣ and , which bind the bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) and carotenoid pigment molecules (6). The bacterial photosynthetic membrane is composed of closely packed arrays of LH2 and RC-LH1 complexes; atomic force microscopy (AFM) of membranes from several photosynthetic bacteria has revealed the organization of these arrays (7, 8). As a result of structural, functional, and AFM studies these are among the best characterized of any biological membrane. Recently, it has been possible to combine the data from structural and functional approaches to construct three-dimensional models of an entire membrane vesicle, comprising over a 100 complexes, at the atomic level (9).Despite these advances, several important aspects of structure and function remain: it is not known how quinol molecules, the product of photochemistry, pass through the apparently closed LH1 rings that encir...