To date, reconstitution of one of the fundamental methods of cell communication, the signaling pathway, has been unaddressed in the bottom-up construction of artificial cells (ACs). Such developments are needed to increase the functionality and biomimicry of ACs, accelerating their translation and application in biotechnology. Here, we report the construction of a de novo synthetic signaling pathway in microscale nested vesicles. Vesicle-cell models respond to external calcium signals through activation of an intracellular interaction between phospholipase A2 and a mechanosensitive channel present in the internal membranes, triggering content mixing between compartments and controlling cell fluorescence. Emulsion-based approaches to AC construction are therefore shown to be ideal for the quick design and testing of new signaling networks and can readily include synthetic molecules difficult to introduce to biological cells. This work represents a foundation for the engineering of multicompartment-spanning designer pathways that can be utilized to control downstream events inside an AC, leading to the assembly of micromachines capable of sensing and responding to changes in their local environment.
Pigment-protein interactions play a significant role in determining the properties of photosynthetic complexes. Site-directed mutants of Synechocystis PCC 6803 have been prepared which modify the redox potential of the primary radical pair anion and cation. In one set of mutants, the environment of P680, the primary electron donor of Photosystem II, has been modified by altering the residue at D1-His198. It has been proposed that this residue is an axial ligand to the magnesium cation. In the other set, the D1-Gln130 residue, which is thought to interact with the C9-keto group of the pheophytin electron acceptor, has been changed. The effect of these mutations is to alter the free energy of the primary radical pair state, which causes a change in the equilibrium between excited singlet states and radical pair states. We show that the free energy of the primary radical pair can be increased or decreased by modifications at either the D1-His198 or the D1-Gln130 sites. This is demonstrated by using three independent measures of quantum yield and equilibrium constant, which exhibit a quantitative correlation. These data also indicate the presence of a fast nonradiative decay pathway that competes with primary charge separation. These results emphasize the sensitivity of the primary processes of PS II to small changes in the free energy of the primary radical pair.
Light-induced charge separation is the primary photochemical event of photosynthesis. Efficient charge separation in photosynthetic reaction centers requires the balancing of electron and excitation energy transfer processes, and in Photosystem II (PSII), these processes are particularly closely entangled. Calculations that treat the cofactors of the PSII reaction center as a supermolecular complex allow energy and electron transfer reactions to be described in a unified way. This calculational approach is shown to be in good agreement with experimentally observed energy and electron transfer dynamics. This supermolecular view also correctly predicts the effect of changing the redox potentials of cofactors by site-directed mutagenesis, thus providing a unified and quantitative structure-function relationship for the PSII reaction center.A lmost all of the earth's biomass originates from photosynthesis in plants and microorganisms. The vast majority of terrestrial photosynthesis depends on the ability of higher plants to use water as a source of protons and electrons, via a poorly understood water-splitting mechanism. A byproduct of water splitting is the release of molecular oxygen; thus water-splitting plants and bacteria are the origin of most of the oxygen in the atmosphere. The site of water splitting in oxygenic photosynthesis is a multicomponent assembly of proteins known as Photosystem II (PSII). PSII converts solar energy into a transmembrane potential, which is used to generate ATP. It also provides the electron supply for Photosystem I, which produces the reducing equivalents for the fixation of carbon as carbohydrate.PSII comprises Ͼ20 identifiable polypeptides, most of which are membrane proteins. At the heart of PSII lies the reaction center, which undertakes the first energy conversion step of photosynthesis by using absorbed photons to drive a series of energy and electron transfer reactions, ultimately resulting in a separation of charge. This charge separation drives both water splitting and the creation of a transmembrane potential. The primary role of the PSII reaction center is therefore to receive excitation energy, either directly from the sun or indirectly from its extensive antenna system, and to use this to create an efficient charge separation. In PSII, however, unlike Photosystem I or purple bacterial systems, the reaction center has to comply with certain essential secondary functions. These secondary functions are all associated, either directly or indirectly, with the role of the PSII reaction center in driving the process of water splitting, and in protection from, or regulation of, the unstable and damaging photochemistry with which it is associated (1).We have attempted to gain an understanding of the charge separation mechanism in PSII by a comparison of calculation and experiment. This helps to reveal any peculiarities of the process associated with the need to drive water splitting. These studies focused on the function of the isolated PSII reaction center (often called the D1...
We show that it is possible to both directly measure and directly calculate Fermi resonance couplings in benzene. The measurement method used was a particular form of two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy (2D-IR) known as doubly vibrationally enhanced four wave mixing. By using different pulse orderings, vibrational cross peaks could be measured either purely at the frequencies of the base vibrational states or split by the coupling energy. This capability is a feature currently unique to this particular form of 2D-IR and can be helpful in the decongestion of complex spectra. Five cross peaks of the ring breathing mode nu13 with a range of combination bands were observed spanning a region of 1500-4550 cm(-1). The coupling energy was measured for two dominant states of the nu13+nu16 Fermi resonance tetrad. Dephasing rates were measured in the time domain for nu13 and the two (nu13+nu16) Fermi resonance states. The electronic and mechanical vibrational anharmonic coefficients were calculated to second and third orders, respectively, giving information on relative intensities of the cross peaks and enabling the Fermi resonance states of the combination band nu13+nu16 at 3050-3100 cm(-1) to be calculated. The excellent agreement between calculated and measured spectral intensities and line shapes suggests that assignment of spectral features from ab initio calculations is both viable and practicable for this form of spectroscopy.
We present a systematic study of the effect of antenna size on energy transfer and trapping in photosystem II. Time-resolved fluorescence experiments have been used to probe a range of particles isolated from both higher plants and the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. The isolated reaction center dynamics are represented by a quasi-phenomenological model that fits the extensive time-resolved data from photosystem II reaction centers and reaction center mutants. This representation of the photosystem II "trapping engine" is found to correctly predict the extent of, and time scale for, charge separation in a range of photosystem II particles of varying antenna size (8-250 chlorins). This work shows that the presence of the shallow trap and slow charge separation kinetics, observed in isolated D1/D2/cyt b559 reaction centers, are indeed retained in larger particles and that these properties are reflected in the trapping dynamics of all larger photosystem II preparations. A shallow equilibrium between the antennae and reaction center in photosystem II will certainly facilitate regulation via nonphotochemical quenching, and one possible interpretation of these findings is therefore that photosystem II is optimized for regulation rather than for efficiency.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.