4.6 Article

Substrate water interactions within the Photosystem II oxygen evolving complex

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 6, Issue 20, Pages 4882-4889

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b407269c

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The O-18 exchange rates for the substrate water in photosystem II can be obtained by time-resolved mass spectrometric approaches and provide insight into the chemical nature of the substrate binding sites in the oxygen evolving complex (OEC). In this communication, we report additional data on the resolvable S-state dependence of the substrate exchange rates in untreated spinach thylakoids. The data reveals that the exchange for one substrate water molecule is resolvable in all S states, i.e. S-0 (k(1) approximate to 10 s(-1)), S-1 (k(1) approximate to 0.02 s(-1)), S-2 (k(1) approximate to 2.0 s(-1)) and S-3 (k(1) approximate to 2.0 s(-1)), and that the second substrate water molecule is resolvable in S-2 (k(2) approximate to 120 s(-1)) and S-3 (k(2) approximate to 40 s(-1)) states, and faster than 120 s(-1) during the S-0 and S-1 states. The temperature dependencies of the exchange rates are also reported. The corresponding activation energies for the slow exchange substrate water in S-1, S-2 and S-3 are 83 +/- 4, 71 +/- 9, and 78 +/- 9 kJ mol(-1), respectively. In contrast, the activation energy for the fast exchange substrate water in S-3, is 40 +/- 5 U mol-1. Finally we also report the secondary isotope effect of deuterium on S-3 state measurements, where the slow exchange substrate water remains unaffected while the rate for the fast exchange substrate water increases by a factor of similar to35%, resulting in an inverse H/D isotope effect. The exchange rates, activation energies and deuterium effects provide further mechanistic constraints on the water oxidation reaction in photosystem II and provide strong evidence that the slow exchange substrate water does not undergo any significant changes in its binding properties during the S-2-S-3 transition.

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