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Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), the most important enzyme for the assimilation of carbon into biomass, features a well-known isotope effect with regards to the CO2 carbon atom. This kinetic isotope effect alpha = k (12)/k (13) for the carboxylation step of the RuBisCO reaction sequence, and its microscopic origin, was investigated with the help of cluster models and quantum chemical methods [B3LYP/6-31G(d,p)]. We use a recently proposed model for the RuBisCO active site, in which a water molecule remains close to the reaction center during carboxylation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate [B. Kannappan, J.E. Gready, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 130 (2008), 15063]. Alternative active-site models and/or computational approaches were also tested. An isotope effect alpha for carboxylation is found, which is reasonably close to the one measured for the overall reaction, and which originates from a simple frequency shift of the bending vibration of (CO2)-C-12 compared to (CO2)-C-13. The latter is the dominant mode for the product formation at the transition state.
This thesis contains quantum chemical models and force field calculations for the RuBisCO isotope effect, the spectral characteristics of the blue-light sensor BLUF and the light harvesting complex II. The work focuses on the influence of the environment on the corresponding systems. For RuBisCO, it was found that the isotopic effect is almost unaffected by the environment. In case of the BLUF domain, an amino acid was found to be important for the UV/vis spectrum, but unaccounted for in experiments so far (Ser41). The residue was shown to be highly mobile and with a systematic influence on the spectral shift of the BLUF domain chromophore (flavin). Finally, for LHCII it was found that small changes in the geometry of a Chlorophyll b/Violaxanthin chromophore pair can have strong influences regarding the light harvesting mechanism. Especially here it was seen that the proper description of the environment can be critical. In conclusion, the environment was observed to be of often unexpected importance for the molecular properties, and it seems not possible to give a reliable estimate on the changes created by the presence of the environment.