AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers engineered photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) by replacing a crucial tyrosine (M210) with noncanonical amino acids, confirming no structural changes in the variants compared to wild type using advanced techniques like mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography.
  • The study used ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy to show that the excited electron donor decays into a charge-separated state through two distinct pathways, with the superexchange route's efficiency varying significantly among the engineered variants compared to the wild type.
  • It was found that the choice of tyrosine analog influences the free energy of an intermediate state, with the 3-nitrotyrosine variant causing the most significant energy disruption, further demonstrating the role of M210 in modulating electron

Article Abstract

Photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from were engineered to vary the electronic properties of a key tyrosine (M210) close to an essential electron transfer component via its replacement with site-specific, genetically encoded noncanonical amino acid tyrosine analogs. High fidelity of noncanonical amino acid incorporation was verified with mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography and demonstrated that RC variants exhibit no significant structural alterations relative to wild type (WT). Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy indicates the excited primary electron donor, P*, decays via a ∼4-ps and a ∼20-ps population to produce the charge-separated state PH in all variants. Global analysis indicates that in the ∼4-ps population, PH forms through a two-step process, P*→ PB→ PH, while in the ∼20-ps population, it forms via a one-step P* → PH superexchange mechanism. The percentage of the P* population that decays via the superexchange route varies from ∼25 to ∼45% among variants, while in WT, this percentage is ∼15%. Increases in the P* population that decays via superexchange correlate with increases in the free energy of the PB intermediate caused by a given M210 tyrosine analog. This was experimentally estimated through resonance Stark spectroscopy, redox titrations, and near-infrared absorption measurements. As the most energetically perturbative variant, 3-nitrotyrosine at M210 creates an ∼110-meV increase in the free energy of PB along with a dramatic diminution of the 1,030-nm transient absorption band indicative of PB formation. Collectively, this work indicates the tyrosine at M210 tunes the mechanism of primary electron transfer in the RC.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8713975PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2116439118DOI Listing

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