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Why study photosynthesis? • Largest biochemical process on earth. • Source of earth’s atmospheric oxygen (began 1.5-2.0 billion years ago). • Source of nearly all biologically useful energy. • Crystal structures known for each membrane protein complex (several Nobel Prizes). • Light is the substrate and ultra-fast kinetic events can be studied under extremely short time periods. • Intellectually challenging and complex (biophysics, biochemistry, molecular biology, ecology). The Dark Reactions 6CO2 + 12H2O + 18ATP + 12NADPH 6C(H2O) + 6O2 + 18 ADP + 18Pi + 12 NADP + 6H2O The Light Reactions Two Types of Reaction Centers Rhodobacter viridis Photosynthetic Bacterial Reaction Center Non-oxygenic Photosynthesis First membrane protein structure resolved at atomic levels of resolution by X-ray diffraction. Michel, Deisenhoffer and Huber - Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1989 The R. viridis BRC is a type-II reaction center L subunit- Binds chlorophyll, pheophytin and quinone cofactors involved in electron transfer M subunit – Binds chlorophyll, pheophytin and quinone cofactors involved in electron transfer H subunit – Stabilizes complex Cyt C – extrinsic protein binds four hemes involved in electron transfer Cofactors: 4 hemes, Chlsp, 2 Chlm, 2 Pheophytin, 2 quinones, 1 non-heme Fe. Pigments in photosynthesis Beta carotene Quinones in photosynthesis mobile and fixed, electron and proton donors and acceptors Cofactor orientation and energetics in the BRC Energy Level Chlsp +0.45 eV eV = 0.7 Qa -0.2 eV Protein-cofactor interactions Cofactor Ligands Chlsp L-H173, M-H200 Chlm L-H153, M-H180 Fe L-H190, L-H230, M-H217, M-H264 Carotenoid No residues involved in coordination Cyt C hemes 17 amino acid helix followed by a turn and Cys-X-Y-Cys-His. Hemes bound by thioether bond to Cys. Function of the BRC in Photosynthesis A light driven proton pump working in concert with the cytochrome bc1 complex to generate a proton gradient and ATP. • Menaquinone in the QA site is singly reduced by an electron initially derived from the ChlSP (primary electron donor). • Ubiquinone in the QB site is then sequentially reduced (2 e-) and protonated (2H+ ) via QA forming UQH2. • UQH2 then exits from the QB binding pocket as a mobile 2 electron and 2 proton carrier and is oxidized by the cytochrome bc1 complex. • The result is the transfer of protons across membrane to establish a pH gradient that drives ATP synthesis. Bacterial Photosynthesis Oxygenic Photosynthesis Linear photosynthetic electron transfer chain of oxygenic photosynthesis Lateral heterogeneity of membrane protein complexes Mobile electron carriers Plastocyanin Cu +2 Mobile electron carriers - ferredoxin Photosystem II Model D1 - D2 Proteins: cofactors and amino acid ligands Fe – D1-H215, D1-H272 D2-H214, D2-H268 ChlZ – D1-H118 ChlZ – D2-H117 YZ – D1-Y161 YD – D2-Y160 ChlSP – D1-H198, D2-H197 Organization of cofactors in the PSII RC psuedo-C2 symmetry Ferreira et al. (2004) Science 303: 1831 Relationship between the PSII RC and the proximal antennae complexes eV ChlZ cycle Charge Stabilization P680+ is a very strong oxidant Relative Midpoint Potentials 1.4 P680 PSII 1.2 Histidine Tyrosine eV 1 0.8 BChl a 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Water Chl a P870 P840 P700 PSI Period 4 oscillation of oxygen evolution following single-turnover flashes 2H2O + 8hv 4H+ + 4e- + O2 Pierre Joliot Kok’s clock, S-state transitions H+ H+ Metallo-radical model for water oxidation PSI Structure The PSI RC polypeptides also function as proximal antennae complexes • psaA and psaB RC proteins are large - 81 kD. • N-terminal six transmembrane spans bind the proximal antennae Chls analogous to the PSII CP43 and CP47 proteins (43-47 kD). • Five, C-terminal transmembrane spans bind the reaction center cofactors analogous to the PSII D1 and D2 proteins (32 kD). • Since PSII is very sensitive to photodamage and proteolytic turnover, unlike PSI, it is more efficient to repair only the damaged protein (D1) than the D1 and CP-43 protein. As a corollary, since photodamage is rare in PSI. its unnecessary for split proteins to facilitate repair Photosystem I RC cofactors PSI redox potential (energy level) and kinetics Cytochrome b6f complex Cyt f = 32 kD, heme Cyt b6 = 24 kD, 2 hemes with different Em Rieske Fe-S = 19 kD, nuclear gene, Fe-His ligands shift Em of 2Fe-2S (+) Subunit IV = 17 kD, analogous to C-terminus of mitochondrial Cyt b PetG, PetL and PetM = 3-4 kD, ? Chlamydomonas Cytochrome b6f structure Stroebel et al., (2003) Nature 426: 413 Chlamydomonas cytochrome b6f complex contains an unexpected c-type heme near the high-potential heme The novel heme may control access to the Qi site or participate in cyclic electron transfer between photosystem I FeS head group moves between Qo site and heme c1,of analogous Cytochrome bc Complex bH Qi Q o b L FeS c1 Q-Cycle oxidant-induced reduction PQH2 = 0.0 eV PQ- = - 0.2 eV (PQ- more negative than PQH2 !!!) Qn heme = - 0.05 eV Qp heme = - 0.15 eV Rieske 2Fe-2S = + 0.3 eV Cyt f heme = + 0.34 eV PC Cu+2 = + 0.365 eV Rate PQH2 ox at Qp = 10 - 20 ms (rate limiting step in Ps) Rate PQ red at Qn = 0.1 ms