CA2-TRANSFER ON BOTH DONOR AND ACCEPTOR SIDES IN PHOTOSYSTEM-II FROM SPINACH( DEPLETION MODIFIES THE ELECTRON)

Citation
Le. Andreasson et al., CA2-TRANSFER ON BOTH DONOR AND ACCEPTOR SIDES IN PHOTOSYSTEM-II FROM SPINACH( DEPLETION MODIFIES THE ELECTRON), Biochimica et biophysica acta. Bioenergetics, 1230(3), 1995, pp. 155-164
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Biology,Biophysics
ISSN journal
00052728
Volume
1230
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
155 - 164
Database
ISI
SICI code
0005-2728(1995)1230:3<155:COBDAA>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Ca2+ depletion of Photosystem II from spinach results in reversible re tardation of electron transfer on both donor and acceptor sides. On th e donor side, a decrease of the electron transfer rate from TyrZ resul ts in an enhanced charge recombination between the oxidized primary do nor, P680(+), and the reduced acceptor quinone, Q(A)(-), which in turn leads to a decrease in the amplitude of the fluorescence yield. In ad dition, slow electron transfer from the manganese cluster in the dark- stable S-2 State results in the appearance of a transient EPR signal f rom TyrZ(ox) which decays with half-times of 600 ms and 5 s. On the ac ceptor side, the disappearance of the 400 mu s decay transient in the fluorescence yield indicates that the electron transfer from Q(A)(-) t o Q(B) has been severely inhibited. These results suggests that remova l of a Ca2+ ion from the donor side in PS II, which results in the inh ibition of oxygen evolution and in the appearance of an EPR signal in the S-3' state leads to structural changes which are transmitted to th e acceptor side. The strikingly similar behavior after depletion of Ca 2+ of the TyrZ(ox) EPR signal and the split radical signal from the S- 3' state suggests that both signals involves the same oxidized amino a cid residue, TyrZ(ox). The absence of large effects on the EPR propert ies of the non-heme iron suggests that the structural changes on the a cceptor side are subtle in nature. Chemical modification of histidine results in inhibition of Q(A)(-) to Q(B) electron transfer and to chan ges in the magnetic properties of the oxidized non-heme iron but only to minor perturbations of the donor-side. This suggests that histidine , susceptible to chemical modification, is located mainly on the accep tor side of PS II.