Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) signals of a histidine side chain were identified in flash-induced S(2)/S(1) difference spectra of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II (PS II) using PS II membranes from globally (15)N-labeled spinach and PS II core complexes from Synechocystis cells in which both the imidazole nitrogens of histidine were selectively labeled with (15)N. A negative band at 1113-1114 cm(-1) was downshifted by 7 cm(-1) upon both global (15)N-labeling and selective [(15)N]His labeling, and assigned to the C-N stretching mode of the imidazole ring. This band was unaffected by H-D exchange in the PS II preparations. In addition, several peaks observed at 2500-2850 cm(-1) all downshifted upon global and selective (15)N-labeling. These were ascribed to Fermi resonance peaks on a hydrogen-bonding N-H stretching band of the histidine side chain. FTIR measurements of model compounds of the histidine side chain showed that the C-N stretching band around 1100 cm(-)(1) can be a useful IR marker of the protonation form of the imidazole ring. The band appeared with frequencies in the following order: Npi-protonated (>1100 cm(-1)) > imidazolate > imidazolium > Ntau-protonated (<1095 cm(-1)). The frequency shift upon N-deuteration was occurred in the following order: imidazolium (15-20 cm(-1)) > Ntau-protonated (5-10 cm(-1)) > Npi-protonated approximately imidazolate ( approximately 0 cm(-1)). On the basis of these findings together with the Fermi resonance peaks at >2500 cm(-1) as a marker of N-H hydrogen-bonding, we concluded that the histidine residue in the S(2)/S(1) spectrum is protonated at the Npi site and that this Npi-H is hydrogen bonded. This histidine side chain probably ligated the redox-active Mn ion at the Ntau site, and thus, oxidation of the Mn cluster upon S(2) formation perturbed the histidine vibrations, causing this histidine to appear in the S(2)/S(1) difference spectrum.
A 245 GHz 8.7 T high-field EPR study of tyrosine-D (TyrD zero) and tyrosine-Z (TyrZ zero) radicals of photosystem II (PSII) from Synechocystis PCC 6803 was carried out. Identical principal g values for the wild-type Synechocystis and spinach TyrD zero showed that the two radicals were in similar electrostatic environments. By contrast, the principal g values of the TyrD zero 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 ribonucleotide reductase. These comparisons indicate that the D2-His189Gln mutant TyrD zero is not hydrogen-bonded or is only weakly so. The HF-EPR spectrum of TyrZ zero was obtained from the D2-Tyr160Phe mutant that lacks TyrD zero. The principal g values were nearly identical to those of the wild-type TyrD zero. The low-field edge of the TyrZ zero spectrum was much broader than at the other two principal g values and was also much broader than the TyrD zero spectrum. From the identical g values and previous work on tyrosyl radical g values [Un S., Atta M., Fontecave, M., & Rutherford, A. W. (1995) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 117, 10713-10719], it was concluded that TyrZ zero, like TyrD zero, is hydrogen-bonded The broadness of the gx component was interpreted as a distribution in strength of the hydrogen-bonding due to disorder in the protein environment about TyrZ zero.
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