4.5 Review

Going around the Kok cycle of the water oxidation reaction with femtosecond X-ray crystallography

Journal

IUCRJ
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages 642-655

Publisher

INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
DOI: 10.1107/S2052252523008928

Keywords

photosystem II; oxygen evolving complex; manganese metalloenzymes; water-oxidation; water-splitting; X-ray free-electron lasers; X-ray spectroscopy

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This review summarizes recent studies on the catalytic reaction in photosystem II (PS II) using XFELs and X-ray crystallography. The structural changes along the reaction pathway were investigated, including notable changes in the Mn complex, such as the insertion and disappearance of a new water molecule, indicating its involvement in the O-O bond formation reaction. The structural dynamics of the protein coordinating with the catalytic complex and the channels important for substrate and product transport were also observed.
The water oxidation reaction in photosystem II (PS II) produces most of the molecular oxygen in the atmosphere, which sustains life on Earth, and in this process releases four electrons and four protons that drive the downstream process of CO2 fixation in the photosynthetic apparatus. The catalytic center of PS II is an oxygen-bridged Mn4Ca complex (Mn4CaO5) which is progressively oxidized upon the absorption of light by the chlorophyll of the PS II reaction center, and the accumulation of four oxidative equivalents in the catalytic center results in the oxidation of two waters to dioxygen in the last step. The recent emergence of X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) with intense femtosecond X-ray pulses has opened up opportunities to visualize this reaction in PS II as it proceeds through the catalytic cycle. In this review, we summarize our recent studies of the catalytic reaction in PS II by following the structural changes along the reaction pathway via room-temperature X-ray crystallography using XFELs. The evolution of the electron density changes at the Mn complex reveals notable structural changes, including the insertion of O-X from a new water molecule, which disappears on completion of the reaction, implicating it in the O-O bond formation reaction. We were also able to follow the structural dynamics of the protein coordinating with the catalytic complex and of channels within the protein that are important for substrate and product transport, revealing well orchestrated conformational changes in response to the electronic changes at the Mn4Ca cluster.

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