4.8 Article

Ammonia binding to the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II identifies the solvent-exchangeable oxygen bridge (μ-oxo) of the manganese tetramer

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1304334110

Keywords

PSII; OEC; water oxidizing complex; water-oxidation; Mn cluster

Funding

  1. Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, the Bioenergie program from the Commissariat a l'Energie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives
  2. European Union [212508]
  3. Vetenskapsradet
  4. Strong Research Environment Solar Fuels (Umea University)
  5. Artificial Leaf Project (K&A Wallenberg Foundation)
  6. Swedish Energy Agency
  7. Kempe Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The assignment of the two substrate water sites of the tetramanganese penta-oxygen calcium (Mn4O5Ca) cluster of photosystem II is essential for the elucidation of the mechanism of biological O-O bond formation and the subsequent design of bio-inspired water-splitting catalysts. We recently demonstrated using pulsed EPR spectroscopy that one of the five oxygen bridges (mu-oxo) exchanges unusually rapidly with bulk water and is thus a likely candidate for one of the substrates. Ammonia, a water analog, was previously shown to bind to the Mn4O5Ca cluster, potentially displacing a water/substrate ligand [Britt RD, et al. (1989) J Am Chem Soc 111(10):3522-3532]. Here we show by a combination of EPR and time-resolved membrane inlet mass spectrometry that the binding of ammonia perturbs the exchangeable mu-oxo bridge without drastically altering the binding/exchange kinetics of the two substrates. In combination with broken-symmetry density functional theory, our results show that (i) the exchangable mu-oxo bridge is O5 {using the labeling of the current crystal structure [Umena Y, et al. (2011) Nature 473(7345):55-60]}; (ii) ammonia displaces a water ligand to the outer manganese (Mn-A4-W1); and (iii) as W1 is trans to O5, ammonia binding elongates the Mn-A4-O5 bond, leading to the perturbation of the mu-oxo bridge resonance and to a small change in the water exchange rates. These experimental results support O-O bond formation between O5 and possibly an oxyl radical as proposed by Siegbahn and exclude W1 as the second substrate water.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available