Abstract

Transient electron paramagnetic resonance (TR EPR) at 9.8 GHz has been used to study the light-induced triplet state in single crystals of Photosystem II (PS II). The crystals were grown from a solution of PS II core complexes from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus. The core complexes contain at least 17 subunits, including the water-oxidizing complex, and 32 chlorophyll a molecules per PS II complex. The PS II complexes are active in light-induced electron transfer and water oxidation. The crystals belong to the orthorhombic space group P2 12 12 1, with four dimers of PS II complexes per unit cell. Laser excitation was used to generate the recombination triplet state in PS II which was then studied by EPR at low temperatures (10 K). The crystal spectra show the same magnitude of the zero-field splitting (ZFS) values D, E as spectra obtained earlier for the triplet state of PS II in frozen solution. The orientation of the ZFS tensor D of the triplet state with respect to the crystallographic axes has been deduced from the analysis of angular-dependent EPR spectra. Knowledge of the orientation of the D tensor component perpendicular to the plane of the chlorophyll ( D Z ) allows an assignment on which chlorophyll of the reaction centre the triplet state is localized at low temperatures. Furthermore, the orientation of the D X and D Y components of the D tensor yielded the in-plane orientation of the respective chlorophyll in the reaction centre providing first experimental evidence for the orientation of this molecule in the PS II.

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