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Chloride Maintains a Protonated Internal Water Network in the Photosynthetic Oxygen Evolving Complex.

Udita BrahmachariJérôme F GonthierC David SherrillBridgette A Barry
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2017)
In photosystem II (PSII), water oxidation occurs at a Mn4CaO5 cluster and results in production of molecular oxygen. The Mn4CaO5 cluster cycles among five oxidation states, called Sn states. As a result, protons are released at the metal cluster and transferred through a 35 Å hydrogen-bonding network to the lumen. At 283 K, an infrared band at 2830 cm-1 is assigned to an internal solvated hydronium ion via H218O solvent exchange. This result is similar to a previous report at 263 K. Computations on an oxygen evolving complex model predict that chloride can stabilize a hydronium ion on a network of nine water molecules. In this model, a H3O+ stretching mode at 2738 cm-1 is predicted to shift to higher frequency with bromide and to lower frequency with nitrate substitution. The calculated frequencies were compared to S2-minus-S1 reaction-induced Fourier transform infrared spectra acquired from chloride-, bromide-, or nitrate-containing PSII samples, which were active in oxygen evolution. As predicted, the frequency of the 2830 cm-1 band shifted to higher energy with bromide and to lower energy with nitrate substitution. These results support the conclusion that an internal hydronium ion and chloride play a direct role in an internal proton transfer event during the S1-to-S2 transition.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • nitric oxide
  • drinking water
  • network analysis
  • molecular dynamics
  • quantum dots