The mechanism of charge recombination was studied in Photosystem II by using flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence and thermoluminescence measurements. The experiments were performed in intact cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 in which the redox properties of the primary pheophytin electron acceptor, Phe, the primary electron donor, P(680), and the first quinone electron acceptor, Q(A), were modified. In the D1Gln130Glu or D1His198Ala mutants, which shift the free energy of the primary radical pair to more positive values, charge recombination from the S(2)Q(A)(-) and S(2)Q(B)(-) states was accelerated relative to the wild type as shown by the faster decay of chlorophyll fluorescence yield, and the downshifted peak temperature of the thermoluminescence Q and B bands. The opposite effect, i.e. strong stabilization of charge recombination from both the S(2)Q(A)(-) and S(2)Q(B)(-) states was observed in the D1Gln130Leu or D1His198Lys mutants, which shift the free energy level of the primary radical pair to more negative values, as shown by the retarded decay of flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence and upshifted thermoluminescence peak temperatures. Importantly, these mutations caused a drastic change in the intensity of thermoluminescence, manifested by 8- and 22-fold increase in the D1Gln130Leu and D1His198Lys mutants, respectively, as well as by a 4- and 2.5-fold decrease in the D1Gln130Glu and D1His198Ala mutants, relative to the wild type, respectively. In the presence of the electron transport inhibitor bromoxynil, which decreases the redox potential of Q(A)/Q(A)(-) relative to that observed in the presence of DCMU, charge recombination from the S(2)Q(A)(-) state was accelerated in the wild type and all mutant strains. Our data confirm that in PSII the dominant pathway of charge recombination goes through the P(680)(+)Phe(-) radical pair. This indirect recombination is branched into radiative and non-radiative pathways, which proceed via repopulation of P(680)(*) from (1)[P(680)(+)Ph(-)] and direct recombination of the (3)[P(680)(+)Ph(-)] and (1)[P(680)(+)Ph(-)] radical states, respectively. An additional non-radiative pathway involves direct recombination of P(680)(+)Q(A)(-). The yield of these charge recombination pathways is affected by the free energy gaps between the Photosystem II electron transfer components in a complex way: Increase of DeltaG(P(680)(*)<-->P(680)(+)Phe(-)) decreases the yield of the indirect radiative pathway (in the 22-0.2% range). On the other hand, increase of DeltaG(P(680)(+)Phe(-)<-->P(680)(+)Q(A)(-)) increases the yield of the direct pathway (in the 2-50% range) and decreases the yield of the indirect non-radiative pathway (in the 97-37% range).
Singlet oxygen production in intact cells of the cynobacterium Synechocystis 6803 was studied using chemical trapping by histidine, which leads to O2 uptake during illumination. The rate of O2 uptake, measured by a standard Clark-type electrode, is enhanced in the presence of D2O, which increases the lifetime of (1)O2, and suppressed by the (1)O2 quencher NaN3. Due to the limited mobility of (1)O2 these data demonstrate that exogenous histidine reaches close vicinity of (1)O2 production sites inside the cells. Flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence measurements showed that histidine does not inhibit Photosystem II activity up to 5mM concentration. By applying the histidine-mediated O2 uptake method we showed that (1)O2 production linearly increases with light intensity even above the saturation of photosynthesis. We also studied (1)O2 production in site directed mutants in which the Gln residue at the 130th position of the D1 reaction center subunit was changed to either Glu or Leu, which affect the efficiency of nonradiative charge recombination from the primary radical pair (Rappaport et al. 2002, Biochemistry 41: 8518-8527; Cser and Vass 2007, BBA 1767:233-243). We found that the D1-Gln130Glu mutant showed decreased (1)O2 production concomitant with decreased rate of photodamage relative to the WT, whereas both (1)O2 production and photodamage were enhanced in the D1-Gln130Leu mutant. The data are discussed in the framework of the model of photoinhibition in which (3)P680 mediated (1)O2 production plays a key role in PSII photodamage, and nonradiative charge recombination of the primary charge separated state provides a photoprotective pathway.
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