Back to Search Start Over

Structures of the intermediates of Kok’s photosynthetic water oxidation clock

Authors :
Aaron S. Brewster
James M. Holton
Paul D. Adams
Pierre Aller
Ina Seuffert
Allen M. Orville
Holger Dobbek
Ernest Pastor
Roberto Alonso-Mori
Nicholas K. Sauter
Ruchira Chatterjee
J. Wersig
Louise Lassalle
Casper de Lichtenberg
Sergio Carbajo
Rana Hussein
Vittal K. Yachandra
Junko Yano
Jan Kern
Nigel W. Moriarty
Dmitriy Shevela
A. Butryn
Iris D. Young
Mohamed Ibrahim
Thomas Kroll
Raymond G. Sierra
Sébastien Boutet
Uwe Bergmann
Dimosthenis Sokaras
Franklin D. Fuller
Sheraz Gul
Athina Zouni
Clemens Weninger
Johannes Messinger
Miao Zhang
Mun Hon Cheah
Thomas Fransson
Alexander Batyuk
Lacey Douthit
Jason E. Koglin
Mengning Liang
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Inspired by the period-four oscillation in flash-induced oxygen evolution of photosystem II discovered by Joliot in 1969, Kok performed additional experiments and proposed a five-state kinetic model for photosynthetic oxygen evolution, known as Kok’s S-state clock or cycle(1,2). The model comprises four (meta)stable intermediates (S(0), S(1), S(2) and S(3)) and one transient S(4) state, which precedes dioxygen formation occurring in a concerted reaction from two water-derived oxygens bound at an oxo-bridged tetra manganese calcium (Mn(4)CaO(5)) cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex(3–7). This reaction is coupled to the two-step reduction and protonation of the mobile plastoquinone Q(B) at the acceptor side of PSII. Here, using serial femtosecond X-ray crystallography and simultaneous X-ray emission spectroscopy with multi-flash visible laser excitation at room temperature, we visualize all (meta)stable states of Kok’s cycle as high-resolution structures (2.04–2.08 Å). In addition, we report structures of two transient states at 150 and 400 μs, revealing notable structural changes including the binding of one additional ‘water’, Ox, during the S(2)→S(3) state transition. Our results suggest that one water ligand to calcium (W3) is directly involved in substrate delivery. The binding of the additional oxygen Ox in the S(3) state between Ca and Mn1 supports O–O bond formation mechanisms involving O5 as one substrate, where Ox is either the other substrate oxygen or is perfectly positioned to refill the O5 position during O(2) release. Thus, our results exclude peroxo-bond formation in the S(3) state, and the nucleophilic attack of W3 onto W2 is unlikely.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....90245725d9a7061792d28a1ef1ceb368