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1.
O2-evolving photosystem II (PSII) membranes from spinach have been cryogenically stabilized in the S3 state of the oxygen-evolving complex. The cryogenic trapping of the S3 state was achieved using a double-turnover illumination of dark-adapted PSII preparations maintained at 240 K. A double turnover of PSII was accomplished using the high-potential acceptor, Q400, which is the high-spin iron of the iron-quinone acceptor complex. EPR spectroscopy was the principal tool establishing the S-state composition and defining the electron-transfer events associated with a double turnover of PSII. The inflection point energy of the Mn X-ray absorption K-edge of PSII preparations poised in the S3 state is the same as for those poised in the S2 state. This is surprising in light of the loss of the multiline EPR signal upon advancing to the S3 state. This indicates that the oxidative equivalent stored within the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) during this transition resides on another intermediate donor which must be very close to the manganese complex. An analysis of the Mn extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) of PSII preparations poised in the S2 and S3 states indicates that a small structural rearrangement occurs during this photoinduced transition. A detailed comparison of the Mn EXAFS of these two S states with the EXAFS of four multinuclear mu-oxo-bridged manganese compounds indicates that the photosynthetic manganese site most probably consists of a pair of binuclear di-mu-oxo-bridged manganese structures. However, we cannot rule out, on the basis of the EXAFS analysis alone, a complex containing a mononuclear center and a linear trinuclear complex. The subtle differences observed between the S states are best explained by an increase in the spread of Mn-Mn distances occurring during the S2----S3 state transition. This increased disorder in the manganese distances suggests the presence of two inequivalent di-mu-oxo-bridged binuclear structures in the S3 state.  相似文献   

2.
Nugent JH  Muhiuddin IP  Evans MC 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):4117-4126
We report the detection of a "split" electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal during illumination of dark-adapted (S(1) state) oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) membranes at <20 K. The characteristics of this signal indicate that it arises from an interaction between an organic radical and the Mn cluster of PSII. The broad radical signal decays in the dark following illumination either by back-reaction with Qa*- or by forward electron transfer from the Mn cluster. The forward electron transfer (either from illumination at 11 K followed by incubation in the dark at 77 K or by illumination at 77 K) results in the formation of a multiline signal similar to, but distinct from, other well-characterized multiline forms found in the S0 and S2 states. The relative yield of the "S1 split signal", which we provisionally assign to S1X*, where X could be YZ* or Car*+, and that of the 77 K multiline signal indicate a relationship between the two states. An approximate quantitation of the yield of these signals indicates that up to 40-50% of PSII centers can form the S1 split signal. Ethanol addition removes the ability to observe the S1 split signal, but the multiline signal is still formed at 77 K. The multiline forms with <700 nm light and is not affected by near-infrared (IR) light, showing that we are detecting electron transfer in centers not responsive to IR illumination. The results provide important new information about the mechanism of electron abstraction from the water oxidizing complex (WOC).  相似文献   

3.
Peterson S  Ahrling KA  Styring S 《Biochemistry》1999,38(46):15223-15230
The oxygen evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II (PSII) gives rise to manganese-derived electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals in the S0 and S2 oxidation states. These signals exhibit different microwave power saturation behavior between 4 and 10 K. Below 8 K, the S0 state EPR signal is a faster relaxer than the S2 multiline signal, but above 8 K, the S0 signal is the slower relaxer of the two. The different temperature dependencies of the relaxation of the S0 and S2 ground-state Mn signals are due to differences in the spin-lattice relaxation process. The dominating spin-lattice relaxation mechanism is concluded to be a Raman mechanism in the S0 state, with a T(4.1) temperature dependence of the relaxation rate. It is proposed that the relaxation of the S2 state arises from a Raman mechanism as well, with a T(6.8) temperature dependence of the relaxation rate, although the data also fit an Orbach process. If both signals relax through a Raman mechanism, the different exponents are proposed to reflect structural differences in the proteins surrounding the Mn cluster between the S0 and S2 states. The saturation of SII(slow) from the Y(D)(ox) radical on the D2 protein was also studied, and found to vary between the S0 and the S2 states of the enzyme in a manner similar to the EPR signals from the OEC. Furthermore, we found that the S2 multiline signal in the second turnover of the enzyme is significantly more difficult to saturate than in the first turnover. This suggests differences in the OEC between the first and second cycles of the enzyme. The increased relaxation rate may be caused by the appearance of a relaxation enhancer, or it may be due to subtle structural changes as the OEC is brought into an active state.  相似文献   

4.
In spinach photosystem II (PSII) membranes, the tetranuclear manganese cluster of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) can be reduced by incubation with nitric oxide at -30 degrees C to a state which is characterized by an Mn(2)(II, III) EPR multiline signal [Sarrou, J., Ioannidis, N., Deligiannakis, Y., and Petrouleas, V. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 3581-3587]. This state was recently assigned to the S(-)(2) state of the OEC [Schansker, G., Goussias, C., Petrouleas, V., and Rutherford, A. W. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 3057-3064]. On the basis of EPR spectroscopy and flash-induced oxygen evolution patterns, we show that a similar reduction process takes place in PSII samples of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus at both -30 and 0 degrees C. An EPR multiline signal, very similar but not identical to that of the S(-)(2) state in spinach, was obtained with monomeric and dimeric PSII core complexes from S. elongatus only after incubation at -30 degrees C. The assignment of this EPR multiline signal to the S(-)(2) state is corroborated by measurements of flash-induced oxygen evolution patterns and detailed fits using extended Kok models. The small reproducible shifts of several low-field peak positions of the S(-)(2) EPR multiline signal in S. elongatus compared to spinach suggest that slight differences in the coordination geometry and/or the ligands of the manganese cluster exist between thermophilic cyanobacteria and higher plants.  相似文献   

5.
During dark adaptation, a change in the O2-evolving complex (OEC) of spinach photosystem II (PSII) occurs that affects both the structure of the Mn site and the chemical properties of the OEC, as determined from low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and O2 measurements. The S2-state multiline EPR signal, arising from a Mn-containing species in the OEC, exhibits different properties in long-term (4 h at 0 degrees C) and short-term (6 min at 0 degree C) dark-adapted PSII membranes or thylakoids. The optimal temperature for producing this EPR signal in long-term dark-adapted samples is 200 K compared to 170 K for short-term dark-adapted samples. However, in short-term dark-adapted samples, illumination at 170 K produces an EPR signal with a different hyperfine structure and a wider field range than does illumination at 160 K or below. In contrast, the line shape of the S2-state EPR signal produced in long-term dark-adapted samples is independent of the illumination temperature. The EPR-detected change in the Mn site of the OEC that occurs during dark adaptation is correlated with a change in O2 consumption activity of PSII or thylakoid membranes. PSII membranes and thylakoid membranes slowly consume O2 following illumination, but only when a functional OEC and excess reductant are present. We assign this slow consumption of O2 to a catalytic reduction of O2 by the OEC in the dark. The rate of O2 consumption decreases during dark adaptation; long-term dark-adapted PSII or thylakoid membranes do not consume O2 despite the presence of excess reductant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The effect of extraction of weakly bound Ca2+ by low-pH treatment on the O2-evolving apparatus was studied by use of low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy. In low-pH-treated PSII membranes, an S2 EPR multiline signal with modified line shape was induced by illumination at 0 degrees C, but its signal amplitude decreased upon lowering the excitation temperature with concomitant oxidation of cytochrome (cyt) b-559 in place of Mn. The half-inhibition temperature for formation of the modified multiline signal was found at -33 degrees C, which was much higher than that for formation of the normal S2 state in untreated control membranes. Signal IIf was normally induced down to -30 degrees C, but its dependence on excitation temperature was different from that for modified S2. This was interpreted as indicating that the low-temperature blockage of modified S2 formation is due to the incapability of electron abstraction from the Mn cluster. The Mn K-edge of X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectrum shifted to lower energy by 0.8 eV after low-pH treatment, but the shift was reversed by addition of Ca2+. Upon illumination at 0 degrees C of treated membranes, the K-edge energy was up-shifted by 0.8 eV, but was not upon illumination at 210 K. These results were interpreted as indicating that extraction of weakly bound Ca2+ by low-pH treatment gives rise to structural and functional modulations of the Mn cluster.  相似文献   

7.
The Mn(4)-cluster of photosystem II (PSII) from Synechococcus elongatus was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy after a series of saturating laser flashes given in the presence of either methanol or ethanol. Results were compared to those obtained in similar experiments done on PSII isolated from plants. The flash-dependent changes in amplitude of the EPR multiline signals were virtually identical in all samples. In agreement with earlier work [Messinger, J., Nugent, J. H. A., and Evans, M. C. W. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 11055-11060; Ahrling, K. A., Peterson, S., and Styring, S. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 13148-13152], detection of an EPR multiline signal from the S(0) state in PSII from plants was only possible with methanol present. In PSII from S. elongatus, it is shown that the S(0) state exhibits an EPR multiline signal in the absence of methanol (however, ethanol was present as a solvent for the artificial electron acceptor). The hyperfine lines are better resolved when methanol is present. The S(0) multiline signals detected in plant PSII and in S. elongatus were similar but not identical. Unlike the situation seen in plant PSII, the S(2) state in S. elongatus is not affected by the addition of methanol in that (i) the S(2) multiline EPR signal is not modified by methanol and (ii) the spin state of the S(2) state is affected by infrared light when methanol is present. It is also shown that the magnetic relaxation properties of an oxidized low-spin heme, attributed to cytochrome c(550), vary with the S states. This heme then is in the magnetic environment of the Mn(4) cluster.  相似文献   

8.
A Mn-containing enzyme complex is involved in the oxidation of H2O to O2 in algae and higher plants. X-ray absorption spectroscopy is well suited for studying the structure and function of Mn in this enzyme complex. Results of X-ray K-edge and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) studies of Mn in the S1 and S2 states of the photosynthetic O2-evolving complex in photosystem II preparations from spinach are presented in this paper. The S2 state was prepared by illumination at 190 K or by illumination at 277 K in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU); these are protocols that limit the photosystem II reaction center to one turnover. Both methods produce an S2 state characterized by a multiline electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal. An additional protocol, illumination at 140 K, produces as a state characterized by the g = 4.1 EPR signal. We have previously observed a shift to higher energy in the X-ray absorption K-edge energy of Mn upon advancement from the dark-adapted S1 state to the S2 state produced by illumination at 190 K [Goodin, D. B., Yachandra, V. K., Britt, R. D., Sauer, K., & Klein, M. P. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 767, 209-216]. The Mn K-edge spectrum of the 277 K illuminated sample is similar to that produced at 190 K, indicating that the S2 state is similar when produced at 190 or 277 K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Su JH  Havelius KG  Ho FM  Han G  Mamedov F  Styring S 《Biochemistry》2007,46(37):10703-10712
The interaction EPR split signals from photosystem II (PSII) have been reported from the S0, S1, and S3 states. The signals are induced by illumination at cryogenic temperatures and are proposed to reflect the magnetic interaction between YZ* and the Mn4Ca cluster. We have investigated the formation spectra of these split EPR signals induced in PSII enriched membranes at 5 K using monochromatic laser light from 400 to 900 nm. We found that the formation spectra of the split S0, split S1, and split S3 EPR signals were quite similar, but not identical, between 400 and 690 nm, with maximum formation at 550 nm. The major deviations were found between 440 and 480 nm and between 580 and 680 nm. In the regions around 460 and 680 nm the amplitudes of the formation spectra were 25-50% of that at 550 nm. A similar formation spectrum was found for the S2-state multiline EPR signal induced at 0 degrees C. In general, the formation spectra of these signals in the visible region resemble the reciprocal of the absorption spectra of our PSII membranes. This reflects the high chlorophyll concentration necessary for the EPR measurements which mask the spectral properties of other absorbing species. No split signal formation was found by the application of infrared laser illumination between 730 and 900 nm from PSII in the S0 and S1 states. However, when such illumination was applied to PSII membranes poised in the S3 state, formation of the split S3 EPR signal was observed with maximum formation at 740 nm. The quantum yield was much less than in the visible region, but the application of intensive illumination at 830 nm resulted in accumulation of the signal to an amplitude comparable to that obtained with illumination with visible light. The split S3 EPR signal induced by NIR light was much more stable at 5 K (no observable decay within 60 min) than the split S3 signal induced by visible light (50% of the signal decayed within 30 min). The split S3 signals induced by each of these light regimes showed the same EPR spectral features and microwave power saturation properties, indicating that illumination of PSII in the S3 state by visible light or by NIR light produces a similar configuration of YZ* and the Mn4Ca cluster.  相似文献   

10.
The parallel-mode electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of the S(1) state of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) shows a multiline signal centered around g=12, indicating an integer spin system. The series of [Mn(2)(2-OHsalpn)(2)] complexes were structurally characterized in four oxidation levels (Mn(II)(2), Mn(II)Mn(III), Mn(III)(2), and Mn(III)Mn(IV)). By using bulk electrolysis, the [Mn(III)Mn(IV)(2-OHsalpn)(2)(OH)] is oxidized to a species that contains Mn(IV) oxidation state as detected by X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy (XANES) and that can be formulated as Mn(IV)(4) tetramer. The parallel-mode EPR spectrum of this multinuclear Mn(IV)(4) complex shows 18 well-resolved hyperfine lines center around g=11 with an average hyperfine splitting of 36 G. This EPR spectrum is very similar to that found in the S(1) state of the OEC. This is the first synthetic manganese model complex that shows an S(1)-like multiline spectrum in parallel-mode EPR.  相似文献   

11.
W F Beck  G W Brudvig 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6479-6486
The binding of several primary amines to the O2-evolving center (OEC) of photosystem II (PSII) has been studied by using low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy of the S2 state. Spinach PSII membranes treated with NH4Cl at pH 7.5 produce a novel S2-state multiline EPR spectrum with a 67.5-G hyperfine line spacing when the S2 state is produced by illumination at 0 degrees C [Beck, W. F., de Paula, J. C., & Brudvig, G. W. (1986) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 108, 4018-4022]. The altered hyperfine line spacing and temperature dependence of the S2-state multiline EPR signal observed in the presence of NH4Cl are direct spectroscopic evidence for coordination of one or more NH3 molecules to the Mn site in the OEC. In contrast, the hyperfine line pattern and temperature dependence of the S2-state multiline EPR spectrum in the presence of tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, 2-amino-2-ethyl-1,3-propanediol, or CH3NH2 at pH 7.5 were the same as those observed in untreated PSII membranes. We conclude that amines other than NH3 do not readily bind to the Mn site in the S2 state because of steric factors. Further, NH3 binds to an additional site on the OEC, not necessarily located on Mn, and alters the stability of the S2-state g = 4.1 EPR signal species. The effects on the intensities of the g = 4.1 and multiline EPR signals as the NH3 concentration was varied indicate that both EPR signals arise from the same paramagnetic site and that binding of NH3 to the OEC affects an equilibrium between two configurations exhibiting the different EPR signals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The g = 4 and g = 2 multiline EPR signals arising from the Mn cluster of the photosynthetic oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in the S2 state were studied in preparations of oriented photosystem II (PSII) membranes. The ammonia-modified forms of these two signals were also examined. The g = 4 signal obtained in oriented PSII membranes treated with NH4Cl at pH 7.5 displays at least 16 partially resolved Mn hyperfine transitions with a regular spacing of 36 G [Kim, D.H., Britt, R.D., Klein, M.P., & Sauer, K. (1990) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 112, 9389-9391]. The observation of this g = 4 "multiline signal" provides strong spectral evidence for a tetranuclear Mn origin for the g = 4 signal and is strongly suggestive of a model in which different spin state configurations of a single exchange-coupled Mn cluster give rise to the g = 4 and g = 2 multiline signals. A simulation shows the observed spectrum to be consistent with an S = 3/2 or S = 5/2 state of a tetranuclear Mn complex. The resolution of hyperfine structure on the NH3-modified g = 4 signal is strongly dependent on sample orientation, with no resolved hyperfine structure when the membrane normal is oriented perpendicular to the applied magnetic field. The dramatic NH3-induced changes in the g = 4 signal resolved in the spectra of oriented samples are suggestive that NH3 binding at the Cl- site of the OEC may represent direct coordination of NH3 to the Mn cluster.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Lee CI  Lakshmi KV  Brudvig GW 《Biochemistry》2007,46(11):3211-3223
Photosynthetic oxygen evolution in photosystem II (PSII) takes place in the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) that is comprised of a tetranuclear manganese cluster (Mn4), a redox-active tyrosine residue (YZ), and Ca2+ and Cl- cofactors. The OEC is successively oxidized by the absorption of 4 quanta of light that results in the oxidation of water and the release of O2. Ca2+ is an essential cofactor in the water-oxidation reaction, as its depletion causes the loss of the oxygen-evolution activity in PSII. In recent X-ray crystal structures, Ca2+ has been revealed to be associated with the Mn4 cluster of PSII. Although several mechanisms have been proposed for the water-oxidation reaction of PSII, the role of Ca2+ in oxygen evolution remains unclear. In this study, we probe the role of Ca2+ in oxygen evolution by monitoring the S1 to S2 state transition in PSII membranes and PSII core complexes upon inhibition of oxygen evolution by Dy3+, Cu2+, and Cd2+ ions. By using a cation-exchange procedure in which Ca2+ is not removed prior to addition of the studied cations, we achieve a high degree of reversible inhibition of PSII membranes and PSII core complexes by Dy3+, Cu2+, and Cd2+ ions. EPR spectroscopy is used to quantitate the number of bound Dy3+ and Cu2+ ions per PSII center and to determine the proximity of Dy3+ to other paramagnetic centers in PSII. We observe, for the first time, the S2 state multiline electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal in Dy3+- and Cd2+-inhibited PSII and conclude that the Ca2+ cofactor is not specifically required for the S1 to S2 state transition of PSII. This observation provides direct support for the proposal that Ca2+ plays a structural role in the early S-state transitions, which can be fulfilled by other cations of similar ionic radius, and that the functional role of Ca2+ to activate water in the O-O bond-forming reaction that occurs in the final step of the S state cycle can only be fulfilled by Ca2+ and Sr2+, which have similar Lewis acidities.  相似文献   

14.
W F Beck  G W Brudvig 《Biochemistry》1987,26(25):8285-8295
The reaction of hydroxylamine with the O2-evolving center of photosystem II (PSII) in the S1 state delays the advance of the H2O-oxidation cycle by two charge separations. In this paper, we compare and contrast the reactions of hydroxylamine and N-methyl-substituted analogues with the electron-donor side of PSII in both O2-evolving and inactivated [tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane- (Tris-) washed] spinach PSII membrane preparations. We have employed low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy in order to follow the oxidation state of the Mn complex in the O2-evolving center and to detect radical oxidation products of hydroxylamine. When the reaction of hydroxylamine with the S1 state in O2-evolving membranes is allowed to proceed to completion, the S2-state multiline EPR signal is suppressed until after three charge separations have occurred. Chemical removal of hydroxylamine from treated PSII membrane samples prior to illumination fails to reverse the effects of the dark reaction, which argues against an equilibrium coordination of hydroxylamine to a site in the O2-evolving center. Instead, the results indicate that the Mn complex is reduced by two electrons by hydroxylamine, forming the S-1 state. An additional two-electron reduction of the Mn complex to a labile "S-3" state probably occurs by a similar mechanism, accounting for the release of Mn(II) ions upon prolonged dark incubation of O2-evolving membranes with high concentrations of hydroxylamine. In N,N-dimethylhydroxylamine-treated, Tris-washed PSII membranes, which lack O2 evolution activity owing to loss of the Mn complex, a large yield of dimethyl nitroxide radical is produced immediately upon illumination at temperatures above 0 degrees C. The dimethyl nitroxide radical is not observed upon illumination under similar conditions in O2-evolving PSII membranes, suggesting that one-electron photooxidations of hydroxylamine do not occur in centers that retain a functional Mn complex. We suggest that the flash-induced N2 evolution observed in hydroxylamine-treated spinach thylakoid membrane preparations arises from recombination of hydroxylamine radicals formed in inactivated O2-evolving centers.  相似文献   

15.
X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the Mn K-edge has been utilized to study the origin of the g = 4.1 EPR signal associated with the Mn-containing photosynthetic O2-evolving complex. Formation of the g = 4.1 signal by illumination of Photosystem II preparations at 140 K is associated with a shift of the Mn edge inflection point to higher energy. This shift is similar to that observed upon formation of the S2 multiline EPR signal by 190 K illumination. The g = 4.1 signal is assigned to the Mn complex in the S2 state.  相似文献   

16.
The Mn donor complex in the S1 and S2 states and the iron-quinone acceptor complex (Fe2+-Q) in O2-evolving photosystem II (PS II) preparations from a thermophilic cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp., have been studied with X-ray absorption spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). Illumination of these preparations at 220-240 K results in formation of a multiline EPR signal very similar to that assigned to a Mn S2 species observed in spinach PS II, together with g = 1.8 and 1.9 EPR signals similar to the Fe2+-QA- acceptor signals seen in spinach PS II. Illumination at 110-160 K does not produce the g = 1.8 or 1.9 EPR signals, nor the multiline or g = 4.1 EPR signals associated with the S2 state of PS II in spinach; however, a signal which peaks at g = 1.6 appears. The most probable assignment of this signal is an altered configuration of the Fe2+-QA- complex. In addition, no donor signal was seen upon warming the 140 K illuminated sample to 215 K. Following continuous illumination at temperatures between 140 and 215 K, the average X-ray absorption Mn K-edge inflection energy changes from 6550 eV for a dark-adapted (S1) sample to 6551 eV for the illuminated (S2) sample. The shift in edge inflection energy indicates an oxidation of Mn, and the absolute edge inflection energies indicate an average Mn oxidation state higher than Mn(II). Upon illumination a significant change was observed in the shape of the features associated with 1s to 3d transitions. The S1 spectrum resembles those of Mn(III) complexes, and the S2 spectrum resembles those of Mn(IV) complexes. The extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectrum of the Mn complex is similar in the S1 and S2 states. Simulations indicate O or N ligands at 1.75 +/- 0.05 A, transition metal neighbor(s) at 2.73 +/- 0.05 A, which are assumed to be Mn, and terminal ligands which are probably N and O at a range of distances around 2.2 A. The Mn-O bond length of 1.75 A and the transition metal at 2.7 A indicate the presence of a di-mu-oxo-bridged Mn structure. Simulations indicate that a symmetric tetranuclear cluster is unlikely to be present, while binuclear, trinuclear, or highly distorted tetranuclear structures are possible. The striking similarity of these results to those from spinach PS II suggests that the structure of the Mn complex is largely conserved across evolutionarily diverse O2-evolving photosynthetic species.  相似文献   

17.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements were performed on photosystem II (PSII) membranes that were treated with 2 M NaCl to release the 17- and 23-kilodalton (kDa) polypeptides. By using 75 microM 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea to limit the photosystem II samples to one stable charge separation in the temperature range of 77-273 K, we have quantitated the EPR signals of the several electron donors and acceptors of photosystem II. It was found that removal of the 17- and 23-kDa polypeptides caused low potential cytochrome b559 to become fully oxidized during the course of dark adaptation. Following illumination at 77-130 K, one chlorophyll molecule per reaction center was oxidized. Between 130 and 200 K, both a chlorophyll molecule and the S1 state were photooxidized and, together, accounted for one oxidation per reaction center. Above 200 K, the chlorophyll radical was unstable. Oxidation of the S1 state gave rise to the S2-state multiline EPR signal, which arises from the Mn site of the O2-evolving center. The yield of the S2-state multiline EPR signal in NaCl-washed PSII membranes was as high as 93% of the control, untreated PSII membranes, provided that both Ca2+ and Cl- were bound. Furthermore, the 55Mn nuclear hyperfine structure of the S2-state multiline EPR signal was unaltered upon depletion of the 17- and 23-kDa polypeptides. In NaCl-washed PSII samples where Ca2+ and/or Cl- were removed, however, the intensity of the S2-state multiline EPR signal decreased in parallel with the fraction of PSII lacking bound Ca2+ and Cl-.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The S2 state of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II is heterogeneous, exhibiting two main EPR spectral forms, the multiline and the g = 4.1 signal. It is not clearly established whether this heterogeneity develops during the S1 to S2 transition or is already present in the precursor states. We have compared the spectra of the S1YZ* intermediate, obtained by visible light excitation (induction of charge separation) of the S1 state at liquid He temperatures, (S1YZ*)vis, or by near-infrared (NIR) light excitation of the S2 state (utilization of the unusual property of the Mn cluster to act as an oxidant of Yz when excited by NIR), (S1YZ*)NIR. The decay kinetics of the (S1YZ*)vis spectrum at 11 K was also studied by the application of rapid-scan EPR. The two spectra share in common a signal with a characteristic feature at g = 2.035, but the (S1YZ*)vis spectrum contains in addition a fast decaying component 26 G wide. The analysis of the surface of the rapid-scan spectra yielded 270 +/- 35 and 90 +/- 15 s for the respective half-times of the two components of the (S1YZ*)vis spectrum at 11 K. (S1YZ*)vis advances efficiently to S2 when annealed at 200 K; notably the g = 2.035 signal advances to the multiline while the 26 G component advances to the g = 4.1 conformation. The "26 G" component is absent or very small, respectively, in thermophilic cyanobacteria or glycerol-containing spinach samples, in correlation to vanishing or very small amounts of the g = 4.1 component in the S2 spectrum. The results validate the assignment of S1YZ* to a true S1 to S2 intermediate and imply that the heterogeneity observed in S2 is already present in S1. Tentative valences are assigned to the individual Mn ions of the OEC in the two heterogeneous conformations of S1.  相似文献   

19.
M Sivaraja  J Tso  G C Dismukes 《Biochemistry》1989,28(24):9459-9464
EPR studies have revealed that removal of calcium using citric acid from the site in spinach photosystem II which is coupled to the photosynthetic O2-evolving process produces a structural change in the manganese cluster responsible for water oxidation. If done in the dark, this yields a modified S1' oxidation state which can be photooxidized above 250 K to form a structurally altered S2' state, as seen by formation of a "modified" multiline EPR signal. Compared to the "normal" S2 state, this new S2'-state EPR signal has more lines (at least 25) and 25% narrower 55Mn hyperfine splittings, indicative of disruption of the ligands to manganese. The calcium-depleted S2' oxidation state is greatly stabilized compared to the native S2 oxidation state, as seen by a large increase in the lifetime of the S2' EPR signal. Calcium reconstitution results in the reduction of the oxidized tyrosine residue 161YD+ (Em approximately 0.7-0.8 V, NHE) within the reaction center D1 protein in both the S1' and S2' states, as monitored by its EPR signal intensity. We attribute this to reduction by Mn. Thus a possible structural role which calcium plays is to bring YD+ into redox equilibrium with the Mn cluster. Photooxidation of S2' above 250 K produces a higher S state (S3 or S4) having a new EPR signal at g = 2.004 +/- 0.003 and a symmetric line width of 163 +/- 3 G, suggestive of oxidation of an organic donor, possibly an amino acid, in magnetic contact with the Mn cluster. This EPR signal forms in a stoichiometry of 1-2 relative to YD+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Kulik LV  Lubitz W  Messinger J 《Biochemistry》2005,44(26):9368-9374
The temperature dependence of the electron spin-lattice relaxation time T1 was measured for the S0 state of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in photosystem II and for two dinuclear manganese model complexes by pulse EPR using the inversion-recovery method. For [Mn(III)Mn(IV)(mu-O)2 bipy4]ClO4, the Raman relaxation process dominates at temperatures below 50 K. In contrast, Orbach type relaxation was found for [Mn(II)Mn(III)(mu-OH)(mu-piv)2(Me3 tacn)2](ClO4)2 between 4.3 and 9 K. For the latter complex, an energy separation of 24.7-28.0 cm(-1) between the ground and the first excited electronic state was determined. In the S0 state of photosystem II, the T1 relaxation times were measured in the range of 4.3-6.5 K. A comparison with the relaxation data (rate and pre-exponential factor) of the two model complexes and of the S2 state of photosystem II indicates that the Orbach relaxation process is dominant for the S0 state and that its first excited state lies 21.7 +/- 0.4 cm(-1) above its ground state. The results are discussed with respect to the structure of the OEC in photosystem II.  相似文献   

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