AI Article Synopsis

  • The manganese-calcium catalyst in photosystem II is essential for efficient light-driven water oxidation, producing oxygen.
  • Recent studies reveal conflicting crystal structures of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC), showing either a vacant manganese site or a bound peroxide.
  • Analysis of Mn Kα X-ray emission spectra suggests Mn oxidation occurs in three transitions and implies that more water molecules bind at a previously open manganese site, contradicting the notion of manganese reduction and the likelihood of peroxide formation.

Article Abstract

The unique manganese-calcium catalyst in photosystem II (PSII) is the natural paragon for efficient light-driven water oxidation to yield O. The oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in the dark-stable state (S) comprises a MnCaO core with five metal-bound water species. Binding and modification of the water molecules that are substrates of the water-oxidation reaction is mechanistically crucial but controversially debated. Two recent crystal structures of the OEC in its highest oxidation state (S) show either a vacant Mn coordination site or a bound peroxide species. For purified PSII at room temperature, we collected Mn Kα X-ray emission spectra of the S, S, S, and S intermediates in the OEC cycle, which were analyzed by comparison to synthetic Mn compounds, spectral simulations, and OEC models from density functional theory. Our results contrast both crystallographic structures. They indicate Mn oxidation in three S-transitions and suggest additional water binding at a previously open Mn coordination site. These findings exclude Mn reduction and render peroxide formation in S unlikely.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.8b01674DOI Listing

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