We report the characterization of the effects of the A249S mutation located within the binding pocket of the primary quinone electron acceptor, Q A, in the D2 subunit of photosystem II in Thermosynechococcus elongatus. This mutation shifts the redox potential of QA by ∼-60 mV. This mutant provides an opportunity to test the hypothesis, proposed earlier from herbicide-induced redox effects, that photoinhibition (light-induced damage of the photosynthetic apparatus) is modulated by the potential of QA. Thus the influence of the redox potential of Q A on photoinhibition was investigated in vivo and in vitro. Compared with the wild-type, the A249S mutant showed an accelerated photoinhibition and an increase in singlet oxygen production. Measurements of thermoluminescence and of the fluorescence yield decay kinetics indicated that the charge-separated state involving QA was destabilized in the A249S mutant. These findings support the hypothesis that a decrease in the redox potential of Q A causes an increase in singlet oxygen-mediated photoinhibition by favoring the back-reaction route that involves formation of the reaction center chlorophyll triplet. The kinetics of charge recombination are interpreted in terms of a dynamic structural heterogeneity in photosystem II that results in high and low potential forms of QA. The effect of the A249S mutation seems to reflect a shift in the structural equilibrium favoring the low potential form. © 2007 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Fufezan, C., Gross, C. M., Sjödin, M., Rutherford, A. W., Krieger-Liszkay, A., & Kirilovsky, D. (2007). Influence of the redox potential of the primary quinone electron acceptor on photoinhibition in photosystem II. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282(17), 12492–12502. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M610951200
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