Abstract
Structural changes upon photoreduction caused by x-ray irradiation of the water-oxidizing tetramanganese complex of photosystem II were investigated by x-ray absorption spectroscopy at the manganese K-edge. Photoreduction was directly proportional to the x-ray dose. It was faster in the higher oxidized S2 state than in S1; seemingly the oxidizing potential of the metal site governs the rate. X-ray irradiation of the S1 state at 15 K initially caused single-electron reduction to S0* accompanied by the conversion of one di-μ-oxo bridge between manganese atoms, previously separated by ∼2.7 Å, to a mono-μ-oxo motif. Thereafter, manganese photoreduction was 100 times slower, and the biphasic increase in its rate between 10 and 300 K with a breakpoint at ∼200 K suggests that protein dynamics is rate-limiting the radical chemistry. For photoreduction at similar x-ray doses as applied in protein crystallography, halfway to the final Mn II4 state the complete loss of inter-manganese distances <3 Å was observed, even at 10 K, because of the destruction of μ-oxo bridges between manganese ions. These results put into question some structural attributions from recent protein crystallography data on photosystem II. It is proposed to employ controlled x-ray photoreduction in metalloprotein research for: (i) population of distinct reduced states, (ii) estimating the redox potential of buried metal centers, and (iii) research on protein dynamics. © 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Grabolle, M., Haumann, M., Müller, C., Liebisch, P., & Dau, H. (2006). Rapid loss of structural motifs in the manganese complex of oxygenic photosynthesis by X-ray irradiation at 10-300 K. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(8), 4580–4588. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M509724200
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