A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä
Photosynthesis re-wired on the pico-second timescale
Tekijät: Baikie Tomi B, Wey Laura T, Lawrence Joshua M, Medipally Hitesh, Reisner Erwin, Nowaczyk Marc M, Friend Richard H, Howe Christopher J, Schnedermann Christoph, Rao Akshay, Zhang Jenny Z
Kustantaja: Nature Publishing Group
Julkaisuvuosi: 2023
Journal: Nature
Lehden akronyymi: Nature
Vuosikerta: 615
Aloitussivu: 836
Lopetussivu: 840
eISSN: 1476-4687
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-05763-9
Verkko-osoite: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05763-9
Preprintin osoite: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2201.13370
Photosystems II and I (PSII, PSI) are the reaction centre-containing complexes driving the light reactions of photosynthesis; PSII performs light-driven water oxidation and PSI further photo-energizes harvested electrons. The impressive efficiencies of the photosystems have motivated extensive biological, artificial and biohybrid approaches to ‘re-wire’ photosynthesis for higher biomass-conversion efficiencies and new reaction pathways, such as H2 evolution or CO2 fixation. Previous approaches focused on charge extraction at terminal electron acceptors of the photosystems. Electron extraction at earlier steps, perhaps immediately from photoexcited reaction centres, would enable greater thermodynamic gains; however, this was believed impossible with reaction centres buried at least 4 nm within the photosystems. Here, we demonstrate, using in vivo ultrafast transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy, extraction of electrons directly from photoexcited PSI and PSII at early points (several picoseconds post-photo-excitation) with live cyanobacterial cells or isolated photosystems, and exogenous electron mediators such as 2,6-dichloro-1,4-benzoquinone (DCBQ) and methyl viologen. We postulate that these mediators oxidize peripheral chlorophyll pigments participating in highly delocalized charge-transfer states after initial photo-excitation. Our results challenge previous models that the photoexcited reaction centres are insulated within the photosystem protein scaffold, opening new avenues to study and re-wire photosynthesis for biotechnologies and semi-artificial photosynthesis.