Singlet oxygen production by photosystem <scp>II</scp> is caused by misses of the oxygen evolving complex
Heta Mattila, Sujata Mishra, Taina Tyystjärvi, Esa Tyystjärvi
Abstract
Summary Singlet oxygen ( 1 O 2 ) is a harmful species that functions also as a signaling molecule. In chloroplasts, 1 O 2 is produced via charge recombination reactions in photosystem II, but which recombination pathway(s) produce triplet Chl and 1 O 2 remains open. Furthermore, the role of 1 O 2 in photoinhibition is not clear. We compared temperature dependences of 1 O 2 production, photoinhibition, and recombination pathways. 1 O 2 production by pumpkin thylakoids increased from −2 to +35°C, ruling out recombination of the primary charge pair as a main contributor. S 2 Q A − or S 2 Q B − recombination pathways, in turn, had too steep temperature dependences. Instead, the temperature dependence of 1 O 2 production matched that of misses (failures of the oxygen (O 2 ) evolving complex to advance an S‐state). Photoinhibition in vitro and in vivo (also in Synechocystis ), and in the presence or absence of O 2 , had the same temperature dependence, but ultraviolet (UV)‐radiation‐caused photoinhibition showed a weaker temperature response. We suggest that the miss‐associated recombination of P 680 + Q A − is the main producer of 1 O 2 . Our results indicate three parallel photoinhibition mechanisms. The manganese mechanism dominates in UV radiation but also functions in white light. Mechanisms that depend on light absorption by Chls, having 1 O 2 or long‐lived P 680 + as damaging agents, dominate in red light.