Mechanism of tyrosine D oxidation in Photosystem II

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Abstract

Using quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations and the 1.9-Å crystal structure of Photosystem II [Umena Y, Kawakami K, Shen J-R, Kamiya N (2011) Nature 473(7345):55-60], we investigated the H-bonding environment of the redox-active tyrosine D (TyrD) and obtained insights that help explain its slow redox kinetics and the stability of TyrD•. The water molecule distal to TyrD, located ~4 Å away from the phenolic O of TyrD, corresponds to the presence of the tyrosyl radical state. The water molecule proximal to TyrD, in H-bonding distance to the phenolic O of TyrD, corresponds to the presence of the unoxidized tyrosine. The H+ released on oxidation of TyrD is transferred to the proximal water, which shifts to the distal position, triggering a concerted proton transfer pathway involving D2-Arg180 and a series of waters, through which the proton reaches the aqueous phase at D2-His61. The water movement linked to the ejection of the proton from the hydrophobic environment near TyrD makes oxidation slow and quasiirreversible, explaining the great stability of the TyrD•. A symmetry-related proton pathway associated with tyrosine Z is pointed out, and this is associated with one of the Cl- sites. This may represent a proton pathway functional in the water oxidation cycle.

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Saito, K., Rutherford, A. W., & Ishikita, H. (2013). Mechanism of tyrosine D oxidation in Photosystem II. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(19), 7690–7695. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1300817110

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