BBSRC Portfolio Analyser
Award details
Modular design of a bioinspired tandem cell for direct solar-to-fuel conversion (Solarfueltandem)
Reference
BB/J010294/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor James Barber
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr James Murray
Institution
Imperial College London
Department
Life Sciences
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
175,476
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
04/01/2012
End date
03/07/2013
Duration
18 months
Abstract
All fossil fuels are derived from sunlight via photosynthesis. To cope with the finite supply of fossil fuels, humanity must also learn to use sunlight to generate fuel. In nature photosystem II uses sunlight to oxidise water to oxygen, and equivalents of hydrogen, which are used to reduce CO2 to organic sugars. This difficult oxidation reaction takes place at an unusual CaMn4 metallocluster in the PSII complex, called the oxygen evolving centre (OEC). We propose to mimic the assembly of the OEC in another "scaffold" protein, by introducing variations in the side chains that will allow a metal cluster to bind. Assembling an OEC in a suitable "smart" matrix that can deal appropriately with the protons generated by water oxidation, is a crucial prerequisite to building an artificial photosynthetic system. The matrix protects the catalytic cluster from bulk solvent, controls the precise environment of the cluster, and rapidly shuttles protons from the cluster to the solvent. Preliminary scaffold designs have been made using an in-house computer program, SITEGRAFT, which searches for mutations around a site that will generate a target constellation of amino acid functional group positions. This program could also be applied to other active-site design problems. We plan on using four-helix bundle di-iron carboxylate proteins as scaffolds, as these already have a buried dimetal centre, and so should need only minor changes to accommodate a slightly larger cluster. The cluster can be assembled with chemical oxidation, and coupled to light-harvesting pigments with a charge separation motif incorporated to generate a hole with sufficient redox potential (artificial reaction centre) to drive water oxidation. Suitable pigments include zinc-porphyrins, and ruthenium bypyridine complexes. As well as this "top-down" approach, we will also investigate the incorporation of an OEC-like cluster into smaller protein maquettes, which are simpler than model proteins
Summary
All fossil fuels are derived from sunlight via photosynthesis. To cope with the finite supply of fossil fuels, humanity must also learn to use sunlight to generate fuel. In nature photosystem II uses sunlight to oxidise water to oxygen, and equivalents of hydrogen, which are used to reduce CO2 to organic sugars. This difficult oxidation reaction takes place at an unusual CaMn4 metallocluster in the PSII complex, called the oxygen evolving centre (OEC). We propose to mimic the assembly of the OEC in another "scaffold" protein, by introducing variations in the side chains that will allow a metal cluster to bind. Assembling an OEC in a suitable "smart" matrix that can deal appropriately with the protons generated by water oxidation, is a crucial prerequisite to building an artificial photosynthetic system. The matrix protects the catalytic cluster from bulk solvent, controls the precise environment of the cluster, and rapidly shuttles protons from the cluster to the solvent. Preliminary scaffold designs have been made using an in-house computer program, SITEGRAFT, which searches for mutations around a site that will generate a target constellation of amino acid functional group positions. This program could also be applied to other active-site design problems. We plan on using four-helix bundle di-iron carboxylate proteins as scaffolds, as these already have a buried dimetal centre, and so should need only minor changes to accommodate a slightly larger cluster. The cluster can be assembled with chemical oxidation, and coupled to light-harvesting pigments with a charge separation motif incorporated to generate a hole with sufficient redox potential (artificial reaction centre) to drive water oxidation. Suitable pigments include zinc-porphyrins, and ruthenium bypyridine complexes. As well as this "top-down" approach, we will also investigate the incorporation of an OEC-like cluster into smaller protein maquettes, which are simpler than model proteins
Impact Summary
The main direct beneficiaries of knowledge arising from this grant are anticipated to be academics involved in protein design and artificial photosynthesis, who will benefit from the techniques developed. In addition to our peer-reviewed scientific outputs, we are committed to the broader dissemination of our research to the wider community. Because of the nature of the research, there are likely to be few immediate impacts outside the academic field during the course of this project. However the longer term biotechnological applications could be significant, as apart from the initial proteins made, the project is an enabling technology for future work.
Committee
Research Committee C (Genes, development and STEM approaches to biology)
Research Topics
Bioenergy, Industrial Biotechnology, Structural Biology, Synthetic Biology
Research Priority
Bioenergy, Synthetic Biology
Research Initiative
European Science Foundation Solar Fuels (ESF SolarFuels) [2011]
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
I accept the
terms and conditions of use
(opens in new window)
export PDF file
back to list
new search