4.5 Article

Why Did Nature Choose Manganese over Cobalt to Make Oxygen Photosynthetically on the Earth?

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 126, Issue 17, Pages 3257-3268

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c00749

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences, Photosynthetic Systems grant [DESC0019460]

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This study demonstrates the first functional substitution of manganese in any oxygenic reaction center by in vitro photoassembly. Reconstituted Co-PSIIX oxidizes water by the standard four-flash photocycle, although producing less oxygen than PSII. Manganese offers advantages of slower charge recombination and greater photodamage tolerance compared to cobalt.
All contemporary oxygenic phototrophs-from primitive cyanobacteria to complex multicellular plants-split water using a single invariant cluster comprising Mn4CaO5 (the water oxidation catalyst) as the catalyst within photosystem II, the universal oxygenic reaction center of natural photosynthesis. This cluster is unstable outside of PSII and can be reconstituted, both in vivo and in vitro, using elemental aqueous ions and light, via photoassembly. Here, we demonstrate the first functional substitution of manganese in any oxygenic reaction center by in vitro photoassembly. Following complete removal of inorganic cofactors from cyanobacterial photosystem II microcrystal (PSIIX), photoassembly with free cobalt (Co2+), calcium (Ca2+), and water (OH-) restores O-2 evolution activity. Photoassembly occurs at least threefold faster using Co2+ versus Mn2+ due to a higher quantum yield for PSIIX-mediated charge separation (P*): Co2+ -> P* -> Co3+ Q(A)(-). However, this kinetic preference for Co2+ over native Mn2+ during photoassembly is offset by significantly poorer catalytic activity (similar to 2S% of the activity with Mn-2(+)) and similar to 3- to 30-fold faster photoinactivation rate. The resulting reconstituted Co-PSIIX oxidizes water by the standard four-flash photocycle, although they produce 4-fold less O-2 per PSII, suggested to arise from faster charge recombination (Co(3+)Q(A) <- Co(4+)QA(-)) in the catalytic cycle. The faster photoinactivation of reconstituted Co-PSIIX occurs under anaerobic conditions during the catalytic cycle, suggesting direct photodamage without the involvement of O-2. Manganese offers two advantages for oxygenic phototrophs, which may explain its exclusive retention throughout Darwinian evolution: significantly slower charge recombination (Mn(3+)Q(A) <- Mn(4+)Q(A)(-)) permits more water oxidation at low and fluctuating solar irradiation (greater net energy conversion) and much greater tolerance to photodamage at high light intensities (Mn-4(+) is less oxidizing than Co4+). Future work to identify the chemical nature of the intermediates will be needed for further interpretation.

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