| Literature DB >> 10090760 |
H Wincencjusz1, C F Yocum, H J van Gorkom.
Abstract
Photosystem II, the multisubunit protein complex that oxidizes water to O2, requires the inorganic cofactors Ca2+ and Cl- to exhibit optimal activity. Chloride can be replaced functionally by a small number of anionic cofactors (Br-, NO3-, NO2-, I-), but among these anions, only Br- is capable of restoring rates of oxygen evolution comparable to those observed with Cl-. UV absorption difference spectroscopy was utilized in the experiments described here as a probe to monitor donor side reactions in photosystem II in the presence of Cl- or surrogate anions. The rate of the final step of the water oxidation cycle was found to depend on the activating anion bound at the Cl- site, but the kinetics of this step did not limit the light-saturated rate of oxygen evolution. Instead, the lower oxygen evolution rates supported by surrogate anions appeared to be correlated with an instability of the higher oxidation states of the oxygen-evolving complex that was induced by addition of these anions. Reduction of these states takes place not only with I- but also with NO2- and to a lesser extent even with NO3- and Br- and is not related to the ability of these anions to bind at the Cl- binding site. Rather, it appears that these anions can attack higher oxidation states of the oxygen evolving complex from a second site that is not shielded by the extrinsic 17 and 23 kDa polypeptides and cause a one-electron reduction. The decrease of the oxygen evolution rate may result from accumulated damage to the reaction center protein by the one-electron oxidation product of the anion.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10090760 DOI: 10.1021/bi982295n
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162