Researchers have ‘hacked’ the earliest stages of photosynthesis, the natural machine that powers the vast majority of life on Earth, and discovered new ways to extract energy from the process, a finding that could lead to new ways of generating clean fuel and renewable energy. Credit: Robin Horton
Researchers
have 'hacked' the earliest stages of photosynthesis, the natural machine that
powers the vast majority of life on Earth, and discovered new ways to extract
energy from the process, a finding that could lead to new ways of generating
clean fuel and renewable energy.
An international team of physicists,
chemists and biologists, led by the University of Cambridge, was able to study
photosynthesis—the process by which plants, algae and some bacteria convert
sunlight into energy—in live cells at an ultrafast timescale: a millionth of a
millionth of a second.
Despite the fact that it is one of the
most well-known and well-studied processes on Earth, the researchers found that
photosynthesis still has secrets to tell. Using ultrafast spectroscopic
techniques to study the movement of energy, the researchers found the chemicals
that can extract electrons from the molecular structures responsible for
photosynthesis do so at the initial stages, rather than much later, as was
previously thought. This 'rewiring' of photosynthesis could improve ways in
which it deals with excess energy, and create new and more efficient ways of using its
power. The results are reported in the journal Nature.
"We didn't know as much about photosynthesis as we thought we did, and the new electron transfer pathway we found here is completely surprising," said Dr. Jenny Zhang from Cambridge's Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, who coordinated the research.
Despite the fact that it is one of the most
well-known and well-studied processes on Earth, researchers from the University
of Cambridge have found that photosynthesis still has secrets to tell. Using
ultrafast spectroscopic techniques to study the movement of energy, the
researchers found the chemicals that can extract electrons from the molecular
structures responsible for photosynthesis do so at the initial stages, rather
than much later, as was previously thought. This ‘rewiring’ of photosynthesis
could improve ways in which it deals with excess energy, and create new and
more efficient ways of using its power. Credit: Mairi Eyres
While photosynthesis is a natural process, scientists have also been studying how it could be
used as to help address the climate crisis, by mimicking photosynthetic
processes to generate clean fuels from sunlight and water, for example.
Zhang and her colleagues were
originally trying to understand why a ring-shaped molecule called a quinone is
able to 'steal' electrons from photosynthesis. Quinones are common in nature,
and they can accept and give away electrons easily. The researchers used a
technique called ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy to study how the
quinones behave in photosynthetic cyanobacteria.
"No one had properly studied
how this molecule interplays with photosynthetic machineries at such an early
point of photosynthesis: we thought we were just using a new technique to
confirm what we already knew," said Zhang. "Instead, we found a whole
new pathway, and opened the black box of photosynthesis a bit further."
Using ultrafast spectroscopy to
watch the electrons, the researchers found that the protein scaffold where the
initial chemical reactions of photosynthesis take place is 'leaky', allowing
electrons to escape. This leakiness could help plants protect themselves from
damage from bright or rapidly changing light.
"The physics of photosynthesis
is seriously impressive," said co-first author Tomi Baikie, from
Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory "Normally, we work on highly ordered
materials, but observing charge transport through cells opens up remarkable
opportunities for new discoveries on how nature operates."
"Since the electrons from
photosynthesis are dispersed through the whole system, that means we can access
them," said co-first author Dr. Laura Wey, who did the work in the
Department of Biochemistry, and is now based at the University of Turku,
Finland. "The fact that we didn't know this pathway existed is exciting,
because we could be able to harness it to extract more energy for
renewables."
Researchers have ‘hacked’ the earliest
stages of photosynthesis, the natural machine that powers the vast majority of
life on Earth, and discovered new ways to extract energy from the process, a
finding that could lead to new ways of generating clean fuel and renewable
energy. Credit: Tomi Baikie
The
researchers say that being able to extract charges at an earlier point in the
process of photosynthesis, could make the process more efficient when
manipulating photosynthetic pathways to generate clean fuels from the Sun. In
addition, the ability to regulate photosynthesis could mean that crops could be
made more able to tolerate intense sunlight.
"Many scientists have tried to
extract electrons from an earlier point in photosynthesis, but said it wasn't
possible because the energy is so buried in the protein scaffold," said
Zhang. "The fact that we can steal them at an earlier process is
mind-blowing. At first, we thought we'd made a mistake: it took a while for us
to convince ourselves that we'd done it."
Key to the discovery was the use of
ultrafast spectroscopy, which allowed the researchers to follow the flow of
energy in the living photosynthetic cells on a femtosecond scale—a thousandth
of a trillionth of a second.
"The use of these ultrafast methods has allowed us to understand more about the early events in photosynthesis, on which life on Earth depends," said co-author Professor Christopher Howe from the Department of Biochemistry.
Source: To ward off aging, stem cells must take out the trash (phys.org)
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