The heme components of chromatophore membranes from the purple bacterium Chromatium vinosum have been studied by EPR. Five different heme species could be distinguished on the basis of their g values, redox midpoint potentials, and orientations of heme planes with respect to the membrane plane: g(z) = 2.94, E(m) = +10 mV, 40-degrees-50-degrees; g(z) = 2.94, E(m) = +10 mV, 0-degrees; g(z) = 3.1, E(m) = +330 mV, 90-degrees; g(z) = 3.3, E(m) = 360 mV, 30-degrees; g(z) = 3.4, E(m) = 0 mV, no detectable orientation. Four of these five hemes (g(z) = 3.3, g(z) = 3.1, and 2x g(z) = 2.94) were ascribed to the tetraheme cytochrome subunit associated with the photosynthetic reaction center of this bacterium. Some of the results obtained have already been reported previously [Tiede, D. M., Leigh, J. S., & Dutton, P. L. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 503, 524-544] and have led to a model for the tetraheme cytochrome subunit in Chromatium which is significantly different from the three-dimensional structure of the reaction center associated subunit in the purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis. The additional data obtained in our work, however, require a reinterpretation of the previously published results. The model arrived at is in general agreement with the X-ray structure from Rhodopseudomonas viridis. A model rationalizing the detailed differences between the structure of the Rhodopseudomonas viridis cytochrome subunit and the data obtained on tetraheme subunits from other photosynthetic bacteria is presented.