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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of oxygen-evolving photosystem II at a resolution of 1.9 Å.

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TLDR
The crystal structure of photosystem II is reported, finding that five oxygen atoms served as oxo bridges linking the five metal atoms, and that four water molecules were bound to the Mn4CaO5 cluster; some of them may therefore serve as substrates for dioxygen formation.
Abstract
Photosystem II is the site of photosynthetic water oxidation and contains 20 subunits with a total molecular mass of 350 kDa. The structure of photosystem II has been reported at resolutions from 3.8 to 2.9 angstrom. These resolutions have provided much information on the arrangement of protein subunits and cofactors but are insufficient to reveal the detailed structure of the catalytic centre of water splitting. Here we report the crystal structure of photosystem II at a resolution of 1.9 angstrom. From our electron density map, we located all of the metal atoms of the Mn(4)CaO(5) cluster, together with all of their ligands. We found that five oxygen atoms served as oxo bridges linking the five metal atoms, and that four water molecules were bound to the Mn(4)CaO(5) cluster; some of them may therefore serve as substrates for dioxygen formation. We identified more than 1,300 water molecules in each photosystem II monomer. Some of them formed extensive hydrogen-bonding networks that may serve as channels for protons, water or oxygen molecules. The determination of the high-resolution structure of photosystem II will allow us to analyse and understand its functions in great detail.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wiring photosynthetic enzymes to electrodes

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes recent concepts for the integration of photosystem 1 and photosystem 2 into bioelectrochemical devices with special focus on strategies for the design of electron transfer pathways between redox enzymes and conductive supports.
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Supramolecular approach towards light-harvesting materials based on porphyrins and chlorophylls

TL;DR: In this article, the status quo of research on artificial light-harvesting antenna based on noncovalent supramolecular assemblies of porphyrin and chlorophyll derivatives is presented.
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The role of the bridging ligand in photocatalytic supramolecular assemblies for the reduction of protons and carbon dioxide

TL;DR: In this paper, the coordination, photophysical, electrochemical and photocatalytic properties of multinuclear metal complexes based on a selection of heterocyclic bridging ligands were discussed.
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Molecular mechanisms involved in plant photoprotection.

TL;DR: This review focuses on the mechanisms involved in photoprotection of chloroplasts through dissipation of energy absorbed in excess.
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Light harvesting in oxygenic photosynthesis: Structural biology meets spectroscopy

TL;DR: Recent structural and spectroscopic work on photosystem complexes from oxygenic photosynthetic organisms revealed the pigment-binding architecture of many subunits and showed the static interactions between subunits in detail for the first time.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Processing of X-ray diffraction data collected in oscillation mode

TL;DR: The methods presented in the chapter have been applied to solve a large variety of problems, from inorganic molecules with 5 A unit cell to rotavirus of 700 A diameters crystallized in 700 × 1000 × 1400 A cell.
Journal ArticleDOI

Features and development of Coot.

TL;DR: Coot is a molecular-graphics program designed to assist in the building of protein and other macromolecular models and the current state of development and available features are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

The CCP4 suite: programs for protein crystallography

TL;DR: The CCP4 (Collaborative Computational Project, number 4) program suite is a collection of programs and associated data and subroutine libraries which can be used for macromolecular structure determination by X-ray crystallography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automatic processing of rotation diffraction data from crystals of initially unknown symmetry and cell constants

TL;DR: Kabsch et al. as discussed by the authors developed an algorithm for the automatic interpretation of a given set of observed reciprocal-lattice points by extracting a reduced cell and assigning indices to each reflection by a graph-theoretical implementation of the local indexing method.
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