Literature DB >> 10353831

Remarkable affinity and selectivity for Cs+ and uranyl (UO22+) binding to the manganese site of the apo-water oxidation complex of photosystem II.

G M Ananyev1, A Murphy, Y Abe, G C Dismukes.   

Abstract

The size and charge density requirements for metal ion binding to the high-affinity Mn2+ site of the apo-water oxidizing complex (WOC) of spinach photosystem II (PSII) were studied by comparing the relative binding affinities of alkali metal cations, divalent metals (Mg2+, Ca2+, Mn2+, Sr2+), and the oxo-cation UO22+. Cation binding to the apo-WOC-PSII protein was measured by: (1) inhibition of the rate and yield of photoactivation, the light-induced recovery of O2 evolution by assembly of the functional Mn4Ca1Clx, core from its constituent inorganic cofactors (Mn2+, Ca2+, and Cl-); and by (2) inhibition of the PSII-mediated light-induced electron transfer from Mn2+ to an electron acceptor (DCIP). Together, these methods enable discrimination between inhibition at the high- and low-affinity Mn2+ sites and the Ca2+ site of the apo-WOC-PSII. Unexpectedly strong binding of large alkali cations (Cs+ >> Rb+ > K+ > Na+ > Li+) was found to smoothly correlate with decreasing cation charge density, exhibiting one of the largest Cs+/Li+ selectivities (>/=5000) for any known chelator. Both photoactivation and electron-transfer measurements at selected Mn2+ and Ca2+ concentrations reveal that Cs+ binds to the high-affinity Mn2+ site with a slightly greater affinity (2-3-fold at pH 6.0) than Mn2+, while binding about 10(4)-fold more weakly to the Ca2+-specific site required for reassembly of functional O2 evolving centers. In contrast to Cs+, divalent cations larger than Mn2+ bind considerably more weakly to the high-affinity Mn2+ site (Mn2+ >> Ca2+ > Sr2+). Their affinities correlate with the hydrolysis constant for formation of the metal hydroxide by hydrolysis of water: Me2+aq --> [MeOH]+aq + H+aq. Along with the strong stimulation of the rate of photoactivation by alkaline pH, these metal cation trends support the interpretation that [MnOH]+ is the active species that forms upon binding of Mn2+aq to apo-WOC. Further support for this interpretation is found by the unusually strong inhibition of Mn2+ photooxidation by the linear uranyl cation (UO22+). The intrinsic binding constant for [MnOH]+ to apo-WOC was determined using a thermodynamic cycle to be K = 4.0 x 10(15) M-1 (at pH 6.0), consistent with a high-affinity, preorganized, multidentate coordination site. We propose that the selectivity for binding [MnOH]+, a linear low charge-density monocation, vs symmetrical Me2+ dications is functionally important for assembly of the WOC by enabling: (1) discrimination against higher charge density alkaline earth cations (Mg2+ and Ca2+) and smaller alkali metal cations (Na+ and K+) that are present in considerably greater abundance in vivo, and thus would suppress photoactivation; and (2) higher affinity binding of the one Ca2+ ion or the remaining three Mn2+ ions via coordination to form mu-hydroxo-bridged intermediates, apo-WOC-[Mn(mu-OH)2Mn]3+ or apo-WOC-[Mn(mu-OH)Ca]3+, during subsequent assembly steps of the native Mn4Ca1Clx core. In contrast to more acidic Me2+ divalent ion inhibitors of the high-affinity Mn2+ site, like Ca2+ and Sr2+, Cs+ does not accelerate the decay of the first light-induced intermediate, IM1, formed during photoactivation (attributed to apo-WOC-[Mn(OH)2]+). The inability of Cs+ to promote decay of IM1, despite having comparable affinity as Mn2+, is consistent with its considerably weaker Lewis acidity, resulting in the reprotonation of IM1 by water becoming the rate-limiting step for decay prior to displacement of Mn2+. All four different lines of evidence provide a self-consistent picture indicating that the initial step in assembly of the WOC involves high-affinity binding of [MnOH]+.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10353831     DOI: 10.1021/bi990023u

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  11 in total

1.  Ca(2+) function in photosynthetic oxygen evolution studied by alkali metal cations substitution.

Authors:  T Ono; A Rompel; H Mino; N Chiba
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  Natural isoforms of the Photosystem II D1 subunit differ in photoassembly efficiency of the water-oxidizing complex.

Authors:  David J Vinyard; Jennifer S Sun; Javier Gimpel; Gennady M Ananyev; Stephen P Mayfield; G Charles Dismukes
Journal:  Photosynth Res       Date:  2015-12-19       Impact factor: 3.573

3.  Photoinhibition as a function of the ambient redox potential in Tris-washed PS II membrane fragments.

Authors:  R Gadjieva; H J Eckert; G Renger
Journal:  Photosynth Res       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 3.573

4.  Photoassembly of the manganese cluster and oxygen evolution from monomeric and dimeric CP47 reaction center photosystem II complexes.

Authors:  C Büchel; J Barber; G Ananyev; S Eshaghi; R Watt; C Dismukes
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-12-07       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Redox potentials of primary electron acceptor quinone molecule (QA)- and conserved energetics of photosystem II in cyanobacteria with chlorophyll a and chlorophyll d.

Authors:  Suleyman I Allakhverdiev; Tohru Tsuchiya; Kazuyuki Watabe; Akane Kojima; Dmitry A Los; Tatsuya Tomo; Vyacheslav V Klimov; Mamoru Mimuro
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-04-26       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Calcium controls the assembly of the photosynthetic water-oxidizing complex: a cadmium(II) inorganic mutant of the Mn4Ca core.

Authors:  John E Bartlett; Sergei V Baranov; Gennady M Ananyev; G Charles Dismukes
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2008-03-27       Impact factor: 6.237

7.  Photoassembly of the Water-Oxidizing Complex in Photosystem II.

Authors:  Jyotishman Dasgupta; Gennady M Ananyev; G Charles Dismukes
Journal:  Coord Chem Rev       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 22.315

8.  Modulating uranium binding affinity in engineered calmodulin EF-hand peptides: effect of phosphorylation.

Authors:  Romain Pardoux; Sandrine Sauge-Merle; David Lemaire; Pascale Delangle; Luc Guilloreau; Jean-Marc Adriano; Catherine Berthomieu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-08-03       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 9.  Photoactivation: The Light-Driven Assembly of the Water Oxidation Complex of Photosystem II.

Authors:  Han Bao; Robert L Burnap
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2016-05-03       Impact factor: 5.753

10.  The role of Ca2+ and protein scaffolding in the formation of nature's water oxidizing complex.

Authors:  Anton P Avramov; Hong J Hwang; Robert L Burnap
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-10-26       Impact factor: 11.205

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