| Literature DB >> 34907018 |
Jared Bryce Weaver1, Chi-Yun Lin1, Kaitlyn M Faries2, Irimpan I Mathews3, Silvia Russi3, Dewey Holten2, Christine Kirmaier2, Steven G Boxer4.
Abstract
Photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides were engineered to vary the electronic properties of a key tyrosine (M210) close to an essential electron transfer component via its replacement with site-specific, genetically encoded noncanonical amino acid tyrosine analogs. High fidelity of noncanonical amino acid incorporation was verified with mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography and demonstrated that RC variants exhibit no significant structural alterations relative to wild type (WT). Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy indicates the excited primary electron donor, P*, decays via a ∼4-ps and a ∼20-ps population to produce the charge-separated state P+HA - in all variants. Global analysis indicates that in the ∼4-ps population, P+HA - forms through a two-step process, P*→ P+BA -→ P+HA -, while in the ∼20-ps population, it forms via a one-step P* → P+HA - superexchange mechanism. The percentage of the P* population that decays via the superexchange route varies from ∼25 to ∼45% among variants, while in WT, this percentage is ∼15%. Increases in the P* population that decays via superexchange correlate with increases in the free energy of the P+BA - intermediate caused by a given M210 tyrosine analog. This was experimentally estimated through resonance Stark spectroscopy, redox titrations, and near-infrared absorption measurements. As the most energetically perturbative variant, 3-nitrotyrosine at M210 creates an ∼110-meV increase in the free energy of P+BA - along with a dramatic diminution of the 1,030-nm transient absorption band indicative of P+BA - formation. Collectively, this work indicates the tyrosine at M210 tunes the mechanism of primary electron transfer in the RC.Entities:
Keywords: Stark spectroscopy; noncanonical amino acid; reaction center; superexchange; ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34907018 PMCID: PMC8713975 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2116439118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779