Studies of the two redox active tyrosines in Photosystem II

Abstract: Photosystem II is a unique enzyme which catalyzes light induced water oxidation. This process is driven by highly oxidizing ensemble of four Chl molecules, PD1, PD2, ChlD1 and ChlD2 called, P680. Excitation of one of the Chls in P680 leads to the primary charge separation, P680+Pheo-. Pheo- transfers electrons sequentially to the primary quinone acceptor QA and the secondary quinone acceptor QB. P680+ in turn extracts electrons from Mn4CaO5 cluster, a site for the water oxidation. There are two redox active tyrosines, TyrZ and TyrD, found in PSII. They are symmetrically located on the D1 and D2 central proteins. Only TyrZ acts as intermediate electron carrier between P680 and Mn4CaO5 cluster, while TyrD does not participate in the linear electron flow and stays oxidized under light conditions. Both tyrosines are involved in PCET.The reduced TyrD undergoes biphasic oxidation with the fast (msec-sec time range) and the slow (tens of seconds time range) kinetic phases. We assign these phases to two populations of PSII centers with proximal or distal water positions. We also suggest that the TyrD oxidation and stability is regulated by the new small lumenal protein subunit, PsbTn. The possible involvement of PsbTn protein in the proton translocation mechanism from TyrD is suggested.To assess the possible localization of primary cation in P680 the formation of the triplet state of P680 and the oxidation of TyrZ and TyrD were followed under visible and far-red light. We proposed that far-red light induces the cation formation on ChlD1.Transmembrane interaction between QB and TyrZ has been studied. The different oxidation yield of TyrZ, measured as a S1 split EPR signal was correlated to the conformational change of protein induced by the QB presence at the QB-site. The change is transferred via H-bonds to the corresponding His-residues via helix D of the D1 protein.

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