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Manganese and the Evolution of Photosynthesis.

Authors :
Fischer WW
Hemp J
Johnson JE
Source :
Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere : the journal of the International Society for the Study of the Origin of Life [Orig Life Evol Biosph] 2015 Sep; Vol. 45 (3), pp. 351-7. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 May 29.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Oxygenic photosynthesis is the most important bioenergetic event in the history of our planet-it evolved once within the Cyanobacteria, and remained largely unchanged as it was transferred to algae and plants via endosymbiosis. Manganese plays a fundamental role in this history because it lends the critical redox behavior of the water-oxidizing complex of photosystem II. Constraints from the photoassembly of the Mn-bearing water-oxidizing complex fuel the hypothesis that Mn(II) once played a key role as an electron donor for anoxygenic photosynthesis prior to the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis. Here we review the growing body of geological and geochemical evidence from the Archean and Paleoproterozoic sedimentary records that supports this idea and demonstrates that the oxidative branch of the Mn cycle switched on prior to the rise of oxygen. This Mn-oxidizing phototrophy hypothesis also receives support from the biological record of extant phototrophs, and can be made more explicit by leveraging constraints from structural biology and biochemistry of photosystem II in Cyanobacteria. These observations highlight that water-splitting in photosystem II evolved independently from a homodimeric ancestral type II reaction center capable of high potential photosynthesis and Mn(II) oxidation, which is required by the presence of homologous redox-active tyrosines in the modern heterodimer. The ancestral homodimer reaction center also evolved a C-terminal extension that sterically precluded standard phototrophic electron donors like cytochrome c, cupredoxins, or high-potential iron-sulfur proteins, and could only complete direct oxidation of small molecules like Mn(2+), and ultimately water.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1573-0875
Volume :
45
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere : the journal of the International Society for the Study of the Origin of Life
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26017176
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11084-015-9442-5