3.9 Review

Molecular, Brownian, kinetic and stochastic models of the processes in photosynthetic membrane of green plants and microalgae

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL REVIEWS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 985-1004

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s12551-022-00988-w

Keywords

Photosynthesis; Electron transport; Photosynthetic membrane; Fluorescence; Kinetic models; Multiparticle Brownian models; Microalgae

Categories

Funding

  1. Scientific Project of the State Order of the Government of the Russian Federation [121032500060-0]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [20-64-46018]
  3. Russian Foundation [20-04-00465]

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This paper presents recent work on the kinetic and multiparticle modeling of processes in the photosynthetic membrane. The detailed models enable the reproduction of fluorescence induction curves and redox transformations, allowing for the study of individual carriers in different photosynthetic organisms under various conditions. The use of modeling also helps quantify reaction rate constants and understand the role of diffusion and electrostatic factors in electron transport.
The paper presents the results of recent work at the Department of Biophysics of the Biological Faculty, Lomonosov Moscow State University on the kinetic and multiparticle modeling of processes in the photosynthetic membrane. The detailed kinetic models and the rule-based kinetic Monte Carlo models allow to reproduce the fluorescence induction curves and redox transformations of the photoactive pigment P700 in the time range from 100 ns to dozens of seconds and make it possible to reveal the role of individual carriers in their formation for different types of photosynthetic organisms under different illumination regimes, in the presence of inhibitors, under stress conditions. The fitting of the model curves to the experimental data quantifies the reaction rate constants that cannot be directly measured experimentally, including the non-radiative thermal relaxation reactions. We use the direct multiparticle models to explicitly describe the interactions of mobile photosynthetic carrier proteins with multienzyme complexes both in solution and in the biomembrane interior. An analysis of these models reveals the role of diffusion and electrostatic factors in the regulation of electron transport, the influence of ionic strength and pH of the cellular environment on the rate of electron transport reactions between carrier proteins. To describe the conformational intramolecular processes of formation of the final complex, in which the actual electron transfer occurs, we use the methods of molecular dynamics. The results obtained using kinetic and molecular models supplement our knowledge of the mechanisms of organization of the photosynthetic electron transport processes at the cellular and molecular levels.

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