S. Un et al., 245 GHZ HIGH-FIELD EPR STUDY OF TYROSINE-D-DEGREES AND TYROSINE-Z-DEGREES IN MUTANTS OF PHOTOSYSTEM-II, Biochemistry, 35(3), 1996, pp. 679-684
A 245 GHz 8.7 T high-field EPR study of tyrosine-D (TyrD degrees) and
tyrosine-Z (TyrZ degrees) radicals of photosystem II (PSII) from Synec
hocystis PCC 6803 was carried out. Identical principal g values for th
e wild-type Synechocystis and spinach TyrD degrees showed that the two
radicals were in similiar electrostatic environments. By contrast, th
e principal g values of the TyrD degrees in the D2-His189Gln mutant of
Synechocystis were different from those of the wild-type and spinach
radicals and were similar to those of the tyrosyl radical in ribonucle
otide reductase. These comparisons indicate that the D2-His189Gln muta
nt TyrD degrees is not hydrogen-bonded or is only weakly so. The HF-EP
R spectrum of TyrZ degrees was obtained from the D2-Tyr160Phe mutant t
hat lacks TyrD degrees. The principal g values were nearly identical t
o those of the wild-type TyrD degrees. The low-field edge of the TyrZ
degrees spectrum was much broader than at the other two principal g va
lues and was also much broader than the TyrD degrees spectrum. From th
e identical g values and previous work on tyrosyl radical g values [Un
S., Atta M., Fontecave, M., & Rutherford, A. W. (1995) J. Am. Chem. S
ec. 117, 10713-10719], it was concluded that TyrZ degrees, like TyrD d
egrees, is hydrogen-bonded. The broadness of the g(x) component was in
terpreted as a distribution in strength of the hydrogen-bonding due to
disorder in the protein environment about TyrZ degrees.