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1.
The transfer of excitation energy between phycobiliproteins in isolated phycobilisomes has been observed on a picosecond time scale. The photon density of the excitation pulse has been carefully varied so as to control the level of exciton interactions induced in the pigment bed. The 530 nm light pulse is absorbed predominantly by B-phycoerythrin, and the fluorescence of this component rises within the pulse duration and shows a mean 1/e decay time of 70 ps. The main emission band, centred at 672 nm, is due to allophycocyanin and is prominent because of the absence of energy transfer to chlorophyll. Energy transfer to this pigment from B-phycoerythrin via R-phycocyanin produces a risetime of 120 ps to the fluorescence maximum. The lifetime of the allophycocyanin fluorescence is found to be about 4 ns using excitation pulses of low photon densities (1013 photons · cm?2), but decreases to about 2 ns at higher photon densities. The relative quantum yield of the allophycocyanin fluorescence decreases almost 10 fold over the range of laser pulse intensities, 1013–1016 photons · cm?2. Fluorescence quenching by exciton-exciton annihilation is only observed in allophycocyanin and could be a consequence of the long lifetime of the single exciton in this pigment.  相似文献   

2.
The wavelength-resolved fluorescence emission kinetics of the accessory pigments and chlorophyll a in Porphyridium cruentum have been studied by pico-second laser spectroscopy. Direct excitation of the pigment B-phycoerythrin with a 530 nm, 6 ps pulse produced fluorescence emission from all of the pigments as a result of energy transfer between the pigments to the reaction centre of Photosystem II. The emission from B-phycoerythrin at 576 nm follows a nonexponential decay law with a mean fluorescence lifetime of 70 ps, whereas the fluorescence from R-phycocyanin (640 nm), allophycocyanin (660 nm) and chlorophyll a (685 nm) all appeared to follow an exponential decay law with lifetimes of 90 ps, 118 ps and 175 ps respectively. Upon closure of the Photosystem II reaction centres with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and preillumination the chlorophyll a decay became non-exponential, having a long component with an apparent lifetime of 840 ps. The fluorescence from the latter three pigments all showed finite risetimes to the maximum emission intensity of 12 ps for R-phycocyanin, 24 ps for allophycocyanin and 50 ps for chlorophyll a. A kinetic analysis of these results indicates that energy transfer between the pigments is at least 99% efficient and is governed by an exp --At1/2 transfer function. The apparent exponential behaviour of the fluorescence decay functions of the latter three pigments is shown to be a direct result of the energy transfer kinetics, as are the observed risetimes in the fluorescence emissions.  相似文献   

3.
The wavelength-resolved fluorescence emission kinetics of the accessory pigments and chlorophyll a in Porphyridium cruentum have been studied by picosecond laser spectroscopy. Direct excitation of the pigment B-phycoerythrin with a 530 nm, 6 ps pulse produced fluorescence emission from all of the pigments as a result of energy transfer between the pigments to the reaction centre of Photosystem II. The emission from B-phycoerythrin at 576 nm follows a nonexponential decay law with a mean fluorescence lifetime of 70 ps, whereas the fluorescence from R-phycocyanin (640 nm), allophycocyanin (660 nm) and chlorophyll a (685 nm) all appeared to follow an exponential decay law with lifetimes of 90 ps, 118 ps and 175 ps respectively. Upon closure of the Photosystem II reaction centres with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and preillumination the chlorophyll a decay became non-exponential, having a long component with an apparent lifetime of 840 ps. The fluorescence from the latter three pigments all showed finite risetimes to the maximum emission intensity of 12 ps for R-phycocyanin, 24 ps for allophycocyanin and 50 ps for chlorophyll a.A kinetic analysis of these results indicates that energy transfer between the pigments is at least 99% efficient and is governed by an exp ?At12 transfer function. The apparent exponential behaviour of the fluorescence decay functions of the latter three pigments is shown to be a direct result of the energy transfer kinetics, as are the observed risetimes in the fluorescence emissions.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The fluorescence from a purified, aggregate form of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein has a lifetime of 1.2 +/- 0.5 ns at low excitation intensity, but the lifetime decreases significantly when the intensity of the 20-ps, 530-nm excitation pulse is increased above about 10(16) photons/cm2. A solubilized, monomeric form of the protein, on the other hand, has a fluorescence lifetime of 3.1 +/- 0.3 ns independent of excitation intensity from 10(14)-10(18) photons/cm2/pulse. We interpret the lifetime shortening in the aggregates and the lack of shortening in monomers in terms of exciton annihilation, facilitated in the aggregate by the larger population of interacting chlorophylls.  相似文献   

6.
The picosecond fluorescence and energy-transfer kinetics of isolated phycobilisomes from Synechococcus 6301 were studied under low intensity excitation. Different combinations of excitation and emission wavelengths were used in order to monitor selectively the fluorescence of the pigments phycocyanin and allophycocyanin. The relatively long overall energy-transfer time of 120 ps from the phycocyanin rods to the allophycocyanin-core is rationalized in terms of the special structure of the rods being built up of several phycocyanin hexamers in this alga species. The fluorescence lifetime of the terminal chromophores in the core was determined to be 1.8–1.9 ns depending on the excitation wavelength. A fast decay component of 20 ± 10 ps which is most prominent at short emission wavelengths is assigned to arise mainly from energy transfer within the C-phycocyanin-units from ‘sensitizing’ to ‘fluorescing’ chromophores.  相似文献   

7.

Photosystem I is a robust and highly efficient biological solar engine. Its capacity to utilize virtually every absorbed photon’s energy in a photochemical reaction generates great interest in the kinetics and mechanisms of excitation energy transfer and charge separation. In this work, we have employed room-temperature coherent two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy to follow exciton equilibration and excitation trapping in intact Photosystem I complexes as well as core complexes isolated from Pisum sativum. We performed two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy measurements with low excitation pulse energies to record excited-state kinetics free from singlet–singlet annihilation. Global lifetime analysis resolved energy transfer and trapping lifetimes closely matches the time-correlated single-photon counting data. Exciton energy equilibration in the core antenna occurred on a timescale of 0.5 ps. We further observed spectral equilibration component in the core complex with a 3–4 ps lifetime between the bulk Chl states and a state absorbing at 700 nm. Trapping in the core complex occurred with a 20 ps lifetime, which in the supercomplex split into two lifetimes, 16 ps and 67–75 ps. The experimental data could be modelled with two alternative models resulting in equally good fits—a transfer-to-trap-limited model and a trap-limited model. However, the former model is only possible if the 3–4 ps component is ascribed to equilibration with a “red” core antenna pool absorbing at 700 nm. Conversely, if these low-energy states are identified with the P700 reaction centre, the transfer-to-trap-model is ruled out in favour of a trap-limited model.

  相似文献   

8.
The fluorescence of purified biliproteins (phycocyanin 645, phycocyanin 612, and phycoerythrin 545) from three cryptomonads, Chroomonas species, Hemiselmis virescens, and Rhodomonas lens, and C-phycocyanin from Anacystis nidulans has been time resolved in the picosecond region with a streak camera system having less than or equal to 2-ps jitter. The fluorescence lifetimes of phycocyanins from Chroomonas species and Hemiselmis virescens are 1.5 +/- 0.2 ns and 2.3 +/- 0.2 ns, respectively, regardless of the fluence of the 30 ps, 532-nm excitation pulse. (Fluence [or photons/cm2] = f intensity [photons/cm2s]dt.). In contrast, that of C-phycocyanin is 2.3 +/- 0.2 ns when the excitation fluence is 8.2 X 10(11) photons/cm2 and decreases to a decay approximated by an exponential decay time of 0.65 +/- 0.1 ns at 7.2 X 10(16) photons/cm2. The cryptomonad phycoerythrin fluorescence decay lifetime is also dependent on intensity, having a decay time of 1.5 +/- 0.1 ns at low fluences and becoming clearly biphasic at higher fluences (greater than 10(15) photons/cm2). We interpret the shortening of decay times for C-phycocyanin and phycoerythrin 545 in terms of exciton annihilation, and have discussed the applicability of exciton annihilation theories to the high fluence effects.  相似文献   

9.
The fluorescence decay spectra and the excitation energy transfer from the phycobiliproteins (PBP) to the chlorophyll-antennae of intact cells of the chlorophyll (Chl) d-dominated cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina were investigated at 298 and 77 K by time- and wavelength-correlated single photon counting fluorescence spectroscopy. At 298 K it was found that (i) the fluorescence dynamics in A. marina is characterized by two emission peaks located at about 650 and 725 nm, (ii) the intensity of the 650 nm fluorescence depends strongly on the excitation wavelength, being high upon excitation of phycobiliprotein (PBP) at 632 nm but virtually absent upon excitation of chlorophyll at 430 nm, (iii) the 650 nm fluorescence band decayed predominantly with a lifetime of 70 +/- 20 ps, (iv) the 725 nm fluorescence, which was observed independent of the excitation wavelength, can be described by a three-exponential decay kinetics with lifetimes depending on the open or the closed state (F(0) or F(m)) of the reaction centre of Photosystem II (PS II). Based on the results of this study, it is inferred that the excitation energy transfer from phycobiliproteins to Chl d of PS II in A. marina occurs with a time constant of about 70 ps, which is about three times faster than the energy transfer from the phycobilisomes to PS II in the Chl a-containing cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301. A similar fast PBP to Chl d excitation energy transfer was also observed at 77 K. At 77 K a small long-lived fluorescence decay component with a lifetime of 14 ns was observed in the 640-700 nm spectral range. However, it has a rather featureless spectrum, not typical for Chl a, and was only observed upon excitation at 400 nm but not upon excitation at 632 and 654 nm. Thus, this long-lived fluorescence component cannot be used as an indicator that the primary PS II donor of Acaryochloris marina contains Chl a.  相似文献   

10.
W. Yu  F. Pellegrino  R.R. Alfano 《BBA》1977,460(1):171-181
Picosecond fluorescent kinetics and time-resolved spectra of spinach chloroplast were measured at room temperature and low temperatures. The measurement is conducted with 530 nm excitation at an average intensity of 2 · 1014 photons/cm2, pulse and at a pulse separation of 6 ns for the 100 pulses used. The 685 nm fluorescent kinetics was found to decay with two components, a fast component with a 56 ps lifetime, and a slow component with a 220 ps lifetime. The 730 nm fluorescent kinetics at room temperature is a single exponential decay with a 100 ps lifetime. The 730 nm fluorescence lifetime was found to increase by a factor of 6 when the temperature was lowered from room temperature to 90 K, while the 685 and 695 nm fluorescent kinetics were unchanged. The time-resolved spectra data obtained within 10 ps after excitation is consistent with the kinetic data reported here. A two-level fluorescence scheme is proposed to explain the kinetics. The effect of excitation with high light intensity and multiple pulses is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Picosecond energy transfer is measured in Anacystis nidulans and Porphyridium cruentum. Fluorescence is sensitized by a 6-ps laser flash, at 530 nm. The time dependence of fluorescence is measured with reference to the laser pulse. Fluorescence is recorded from phycoerythrin (576 nm), R-phycocyanin (640 nm), allophycocyanin (666 nm), Photosystem II chlorophyll (690 nm) and long wave length chlorophyll (715 nm). Energy transfer measurements are made at 37 degrees C, 23 degrees C, and 0 degrees C, and 77 degrees K. It is shown that the rate of energy transfer can be varied with temperature. In both A. nidulans and P. cruentum there is a sequential transfer of excitation energy from phycoerythrin to phycocyanin to allophycocyan to Photosystem II chlorophyll fluorescence. The long wavelength chlorophyll fluorescence at 715 nm, however, does not always follow a sequential transfer of excitation energy. Depending on the temperature, fluorescence at 715 nm can precede fluorescence from phycocyanin.  相似文献   

13.
以变藻蓝蛋白的晶体结构和光谱性质为基础,利用密度矩阵理论对变藻蓝蛋白六聚体内的激发能传递物理机制进行分析,并利用时间分辨荧光光谱技术对其能量传递途径进行实时探测。结果表明:在变藻蓝蛋白六聚体内,色素对(毗邻单体上的色素αi84βj84,其中j=i±1,和β*LCM42)内的能量传递服从激子偶极-偶极相互作用机制;而色素对之间的能量传递机制则为Frster偶极-偶极相互作用机制,并且其能量传递途径分为两类:(1).两个变藻蓝蛋白三聚体之间色素对的能量传递,其时间常数大约为15ps左右;(2).同一变藻蓝蛋白三聚体内色素对间的能量传递,在APII三聚体内,其能量传递时间大约为45ps左右,而在API三聚体内,其能量传递时间常数为45ps和65ps。  相似文献   

14.
以变藻蓝蛋白的晶体结构和光谱性质为基础,利用密度矩阵理论对变藻蓝蛋白六聚体内的激发能传递物理机制进行分析,并利用时间分辨荧光光谱技术对其能量传递途径进行实时探测。结果表明:在变藻蓝蛋白六聚体内,色素对(毗邻单体上的色素αi84βj84,其中j=i±1,和β*LCM42)内的能量传递服从激子偶极-偶极相互作用机制;而色素对之间的能量传递机制则为Frster偶极-偶极相互作用机制,并且其能量传递途径分为两类:(1).两个变藻蓝蛋白三聚体之间色素对的能量传递,其时间常数大约为15ps左右;(2).同一变藻蓝蛋白三聚体内色素对间的能量传递,在APII三聚体内,其能量传递时间大约为45ps左右,而在API三聚体内,其能量传递时间常数为45ps和65ps。  相似文献   

15.
Disc-shaped phycobilisomes were purified from Triton X100 treated cell homogenates of the unicellular marine red alga, Rhodella violacea. Their absorption spectrum had principal maxima at 544 and 568 nm (B-phycoerythrin), 624 nm (C-phycocyanin) and a distinct shoulder at 652 nm (allophycocyanin). Intermolecular energy transfer within the phycobilisomes was clearly demonstrated by fluorescence data. Excited at 546 nm intact phycobilisomes showed a main fluorescence emission maximum at 665 nm, a minor one at 577 nm and a shoulder at 730 nm.Dissociated phycobilisomes revealed a composition of 58% B-phycoerythrin, 25% C-phycocyanin and 17% allophycocyanin under the cultural conditions used. Analytical methods resolved no other components than phycobiliproteins. In addition to the defined C-phycocyanin and two isoproteins of B-phycoerythrin a stable heterogeneous aggregate of B-phycoerythrin/C-phycocyanin was separated in considerable amounts.In the electron microscope negatively stained phycobilisomes appeared as elliptical aggregates having dimensions slightly above the values found in ultrathin sections and a detailed subunit structure. All observations and data suggest a new rhodophytan phycobilisome type in Rhodella violacea.Abbreviations PBS phycobilisome(s) - PE B-phycoerythrin - PC C-phycocyanin - APC allophycocyanin - C concentration (mg/ml) - E extinction  相似文献   

16.
Fractions enriched in either Photosystem I or Photosystem II have been prepared from chloroplasts with digitonin. A more detailed analysis of the decay kinetics of fluorescence excited by a picosecond laser pulse has been possible compared to experiments with unfractionated systems. The Photosystem I fractions show a very short component (? 100 ps) at room temperature which is apparently independent of pulse intensity over the range of photon densities used (5 · 1013–1 · 1016 photons cm?2). The Photosystem II fraction has a short initial lifetime at room temperature which is strongly intensity-dependent approaching 500 ps at low photon densities, but decreasing to close to 150 ps at the highest photon densities. All of these room temperature decays appear to be non-exponential, and may possibly be fitted by at t12 expression, expected from a random diffusion of excitations via Förster energy transfer. On cooling to 77 K, lifetimes of both Photosystem I and Photosystem II increase, the lengthening with Photosystem I being more striking. The Photosystem I decays become intensity dependent like the Photosystem II, and at the lowest photon densities decays which are more nearly exponential within the experimental error give initial lifetimes of about 2 ns. The non-exponential decays seen at high photon densities appear to fit a t12 expression.  相似文献   

17.
The excited state kinetics of three different allophycocyanin (AP) complexes has been studied by picosecond fluorescence spectroscopy. Both the fluorescence kinetics and the decay-associated fluorescence spectra of the different complexes can be understood on the basis of a structural model for AP which uses (a) an analogy to the known x-ray determined structure of C-phycocyanin, (b) the biochemical analogies of AP and C-phycocyanin, and (c) the biochemical composition of AP-B (AP-681). A model is developed that describes the excited state kinetics as a mixture of internal conversion processes within a coupled exciton pair and energy transfer processes between exciton pairs. We found excited state relaxation times in the range of 13 ps (AP with linker peptide) up to 66 ps (AP-B). The trimeric aggregates AP 660 and AP 665 show one fast relaxation component each, as was expected on the basis of their symmetry properties. The lower symmetry of AP-B (AP-681) gives rise to two fast lifetime components (τ1 = 23 ps and τ2 = 66 ps) which are attributed to internal conversion and/or energy transfer between excitonic states formed by the coupling of symmetrically and spectrally nonequivalent chromophores. It is proposed that the internal conversion between exciton states of strongly coupled chromophores fulfills the requirements of the small energy gap limit. Thus, internal conversion rates in the order of tens of picoseconds are feasible. The influence of the interaction of the linker peptide on the properties of the AP trimer are manifested in the fluorescence kinetics. Lack of the linker peptide in AP 660 gives rise to a heterogeneity in the chromophore conformations and chromophore-chromophore interactions.  相似文献   

18.
Energy-transfer measurements based upon acceptor fluorophore emission are plagued with background fluorescence resulting from absorption of the excitation light by the acceptor fluorophore. The present work examines the use of a long-lifetime donor fluorophore and a short-lifetime acceptor fluorophore, combined with pulsed-laser excitation and electronic gating of detector signals, to separate the component of acceptor emission due to energy transfer from the component due to absorption of the excitation light. Theoretical equations describing the acceptor fluorescence and integrated acceptor fluorescence show that increasing the integration delay relative to the excitation pulse should greatly enhance detection of the energy-transfer component. The time-resolved detection of energy transfer was tested in a competitive immunoassay format in which antibodies to human immunoglobulin G (IgG) F(ab')2 fragments were covalently labeled with pyrenebutyrate (tau = 100 ns) and IgG Fab' fragments were covalently labeled with B-phycoerythrin (tau = 2.5 ns). Solutions containing these two conjugates exhibited energy transfer from the pyrenebutyrate to the B-phycoerythrin upon excitation with a nitrogen laser. Acceptor emission was measured with 0- and 20-ns integration delays and the ratios of the energy-transfer component to the laser-excited component were found to increase by 9- to 15-fold when the 20-ns delay was used in three series of immunoassays. Good agreement between the experimental data and theory was obtained following convolution of the theoretical fluorescence responses with the instrumental response of the fluorometer.  相似文献   

19.
Fluorescent emission kinetics of isolated spinach chloroplasts have been observed at room temperature with an instrument resolution time of 10 ps using a frequency doubled, mode-locked Nd:glass laser and an optical Kerr gate. At 685 nm two maxima are apparent in the time dependency of the fluorescence; the first occurs at 15 ps and the second at 90 ps after the flash. The intervening minimum occurs at about 50 ps. On the basis of theoretical models, lifetimes of the components associated with the two peaks and spectra (in escarole chloroplasts), the fluorescence associated with the first peak is interpreted as originating from Photosystem I (PSI) (risetime ≤10 ps, lifetime ≤10 ps) and the second peak from Photosystem II (PSII) (lifetime, 210 ps in spinach chloroplasts and 320 ps in escarole chloroplasts). The fact that there are two fluorescing components with a quantum yield ratio ≤0.048 explains the previous discrepancy between the quantum yield of fluorescence measured in chloroplasts directly and that calculated from the lifetime of PSII. The 90 ps delay in the peak of PSII fluorescence is probably explained by energy transfer between accessory pigments such as carotenoids and Chl a. Energy spillover between PSI and PSII is not apparent during the time of observation. The results of this work support the view that the transfer of excitation energy to the trap complex in both photosystems occurs by means of a molecular excitation mechanism of intermediate coupling strength. Although triplet states are not of major importance in energy transfer to PSII traps, the possibility that they are involved in PSI photochemistry has not been eliminated.  相似文献   

20.
The fluorescence decays of barley chloroplasts have been measured by single-photon counting with tunable picosecond dye laser excitation. The fluorescence decays of dark-adapted chloroplasts are best fitted to a sum of three exponential lifetime components with lifetimes of 112, 380 and 2214 ps. The relative magnitude of each component is shown to be dependent on the excitation wavelength and collected emission wavelength. The excitation wavelength dependence is correlated with the Photosystem (PS) I and PS II action study of Ried [36] and with the measured pigment distributions in the photosynthetic unit [37,41]. Experiments varying the single excitation pulse intensity from 108 to 1012 photons/cm2 pulse show that our results are not distorted by singlet-singlet annihilation. Unflowed samples where the cloroplasts are under constant illumination show 2-fold increases in quantum yield of fluorescence primarily in the two longer lifetime components. Theoretical calculations of Shipman [31] on an isolated reaction center with a homogeneous antenna are discussed and the principles extended to discussion of the measured barley chloroplast fluorescence decay components in terms of photosynthetic unit light-harvesting array models and earlier experimental work. Our data support a photosynthetic unit model in which 70–90% of the photons absorbed are quenched by either PS I or efficiently quenching PS II in a process where the fluorescence lifetime is 100 ps. The origin of the intermediate 380 ps. component is probably due to excitation transfer to a PS II reaction center in a redox state which quenches less efficiently.  相似文献   

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