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Engineering Proton Transfer in Photosynthetic Oxygen Evolution: Chloride, Nitrate, and Trehalose Reorganize a Hydrogen-Bonding Network.

Udita BrahmachariZhanjun GuoSara E KonecnyEmmanuela N C ObiBridgette A Barry
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2018)
Photosystem II oxidizes water at a Mn4CaO5 cluster. Oxygen evolution is accompanied by proton release through a 35 Å hydrogen-bonding network to the lumen. The mechanism of this proton-transfer reaction is not known, but the reaction is dependent on chloride. Here, vibrational spectroscopy defines the functional properties of the proton-transfer network using chloride, bromide, and nitrate as perturbative agents. As assessed by peptide C═O frequencies, bromide substitution yields a spectral Stark shift because of its increase in ionic radius. Nitrate substitution leads to more complex spectral changes, consistent with an overall increase in hydrogen-bonding interactions with the peptide backbone. The effects are similar to spectral changes previously documented in site-directed mutations in a putative lumenal pathway. Importantly, the effects of nitrate are reversed by the osmolyte, trehalose. Trehalose is known to alter hydrogen-bonding interactions in proteins. Trehalose addition also reverses a shift in an internal hydronium ion signal, consistent with an alteration in its p Ka value and a change in the basicity of bound nitrate. The spectra provide evidence that the proton-transfer pathway contains peptide carbonyl groups, internal water, a hydronium ion, and amino acid side chains. These experiments also show that the proton-transfer pathway functionally adapts to changes in electric field, p Ka, and hydrogen bonding and thereby optimizes proton transfer to the lumen.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • nitric oxide
  • drinking water
  • optical coherence tomography
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • high resolution
  • computed tomography
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • magnetic resonance
  • mass spectrometry