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Photosynthetic Water Oxidation at High O<sub>2</sub> Backpressure Monitored by Delayed Chlorophyll Fluorescence
38
Citations
10
References
2005
Year
EngineeringPhotorespirationBound PeroxidePhotobiologyChemistryWater MoleculesEnvironmental PhotochemistryRedox BiologyChemical EngineeringBioenergeticsPhotocatalysisPhotosynthesisHealth SciencesPhotochemistryPhotosystemsBiochemistryAtmospheric DioxygenMechanistic PhotochemistryPhotosynthetic Water OxidationDelayed Chlorophyll FluorescenceEnvironmental EngineeringPlant Physiology
The atmospheric dioxygen is produced by photosynthetic organisms. This light-driven process culminates in what appears as one step: a four-electron abstraction from two water molecules bound to the Mn4Ca complex of photosystem II. Recently, an intermediate of the O2-producing reaction sequence was stabilized by elevated oxygen backpressure and detected by UV flash photometry [Clausen, J., and Junge, W. (2004) Nature 430, 480]. We scrutinized its properties by delayed chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. Half-suppression of oxygen evolution was observed at a similar O2 pressure of 2.3 bar, as previously, now with photosystem II membrane particles from spinach, without artificial electron acceptors, and at a high signal-to-noise ratio. The data are tentatively interpreted as the stabilization of a 2-fold oxidized state of the catalytic center (S2*) with bound peroxide and its slow conversion into the normal S2 state by the release of peroxide.
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