Gel-electrophoretic assay revealed that the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of Chromatium minutissimum, in contrast to the well-known RC Rhodopseudomonas viridis, consists of five rather than four subunits with molecular masses of 37, 34, 25, 19, and 17 kDa. The 37- and 19-kDa subunits are stained with tetramethylbenzidine for the cytochrome c hemes. Absorption spectra show that the concentration of reduced cytochromes in the C. minutissimum RC poised at redox potential of -150 mV (fully reduced pool of hemes) is about three times more than in the C. minutissimum RC poised at redox potential of +260 mV (only high-potential hemes are reduced). The results of redox titration of absorption changes at the cytochrome c alpha-band are most appropriately approximated by a six-component theoretical curve with the midpoint potentials of Em1 = 390 mV, Em2 = 320 mV, Em3 = 210 mV, Em4 = 100 mV, Em5 = 20 mV, and Em6 = -50 mV. Possible functions of the cytochromes with the midpoint potentials 210 and 100 mV, which have not been found in purple bacteria before, are discussed.