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Bicarbonate-induced redox tuning in Photosystem II for regulation and protection.

Katharina BrinkertSven De CausmaeckerAnja Krieger-LiszkayAndrea FantuzziAlfred William Rutherford
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2016)
The midpoint potential (Em) of [Formula: see text], the one-electron acceptor quinone of Photosystem II (PSII), provides the thermodynamic reference for calibrating PSII bioenergetics. Uncertainty exists in the literature, with two values differing by ∼80 mV. Here, we have resolved this discrepancy by using spectroelectrochemistry on plant PSII-enriched membranes. Removal of bicarbonate (HCO3-) shifts the Em from ∼-145 mV to -70 mV. The higher values reported earlier are attributed to the loss of HCO3- during the titrations (pH 6.5, stirred under argon gassing). These findings mean that HCO3- binds less strongly when QA-• is present. Light-induced QA-• formation triggered HCO3- loss as manifest by the slowed electron transfer and the upshift in the Em of QA HCO3--depleted PSII also showed diminished light-induced 1O2 formation. This finding is consistent with a model in which the increase in the Em of [Formula: see text] promotes safe, direct [Formula: see text] charge recombination at the expense of the damaging back-reaction route that involves chlorophyll triplet-mediated 1O2 formation [Johnson GN, et al. (1995) Biochim Biophys Acta 1229:202-207]. These findings provide a redox tuning mechanism, in which the interdependence of the redox state of QA and the binding by HCO3- regulates and protects PSII. The potential for a sink (CO2) to source (PSII) feedback mechanism is discussed.
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