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1.
We measured picosecond time-resolved fluorescence of intact Photosystem I complexes from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Arabidopsis thaliana. The antenna system of C. reinhardtii contains about 30-60 chlorophylls more than that of A. thaliana, but lacks the so-called red chlorophylls, chlorophylls that absorb at longer wavelength than the primary electron donor. In C. reinhardtii, the main lifetimes of excitation trapping are about 27 and 68 ps. The overall lifetime of C. reinhardtii is considerably shorter than in A. thaliana. We conclude that the amount and energies of the red chlorophylls have a larger effect on excitation trapping time in Photosystem I than the antenna size.  相似文献   

2.
We measured picosecond time-resolved fluorescence of intact Photosystem I complexes from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Arabidopsis thaliana. The antenna system of C. reinhardtii contains about 30-60 chlorophylls more than that of A. thaliana, but lacks the so-called red chlorophylls, chlorophylls that absorb at longer wavelength than the primary electron donor. In C. reinhardtii, the main lifetimes of excitation trapping are about 27 and 68 ps. The overall lifetime of C. reinhardtii is considerably shorter than in A. thaliana. We conclude that the amount and energies of the red chlorophylls have a larger effect on excitation trapping time in Photosystem I than the antenna size.  相似文献   

3.
The analysis of FDMR spectra, recorded at multiple emission wavelengths, by a global decomposition technique, has allowed us to characterise the triplet populations associated with Photosystem I and Photosystem II of thylakoids in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Three triplet populations are observed at fluorescence emissions characteristic of Photosystem II, and their zero field splitting parameters have been determined. These are similar to the zero field parameters for the three Photosystem II triplets previously reported for spinach thylakoids, suggesting that they have a widespread occurrence in nature. None of these triplets have the zero field splitting parameters characteristic of the Photosystem II recombination triplet observed only under reducing conditions. Because these triplets are generated under non-reducing redox conditions, when the recombination triplet is undetectable, it is suggested that they may be involved in the photoinhibition of Photosystem II. At emission wavelengths characteristic of Photosystem I, three triplet populations are observed, two of which are attributed to the P(700) recombination triplet frozen in two different conformations, based on the microwave-induced fluorescence emission spectra and the triplet minus singlet difference spectra. The third triplet population detected at Photosystem I emission wavelengths, which was previously unresolved, is proposed to originate from the antenna chlorophyll of the core or the unusually blue-shifted outer antenna complexes of this organism.  相似文献   

4.
The analysis of FDMR spectra, recorded at multiple emission wavelengths, by a global decomposition technique, has allowed us to characterise the triplet populations associated with Photosystem I and Photosystem II of thylakoids in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Three triplet populations are observed at fluorescence emissions characteristic of Photosystem II, and their zero field splitting parameters have been determined. These are similar to the zero field parameters for the three Photosystem II triplets previously reported for spinach thylakoids, suggesting that they have a widespread occurrence in nature. None of these triplets have the zero field splitting parameters characteristic of the Photosystem II recombination triplet observed only under reducing conditions. Because these triplets are generated under non-reducing redox conditions, when the recombination triplet is undetectable, it is suggested that they may be involved in the photoinhibition of Photosystem II. At emission wavelengths characteristic of Photosystem I, three triplet populations are observed, two of which are attributed to the P700 recombination triplet frozen in two different conformations, based on the microwave-induced fluorescence emission spectra and the triplet minus singlet difference spectra. The third triplet population detected at Photosystem I emission wavelengths, which was previously unresolved, is proposed to originate from the antenna chlorophyll of the core or the unusually blue-shifted outer antenna complexes of this organism.  相似文献   

5.
《BBA》2020,1861(11):148274
In higher-plant Photosystem I (PSI), the majority of “red” chlorophylls (absorbing at longer wavelengths than the reaction centre P700) are located in the peripheral antenna, but contradicting reports are given about red forms in the core complex. Here we attempt to clarify the spectroscopic characteristics and quantify the red forms in the PSI core complex, which have profound implication on understanding the energy transfer and charge separation dynamics. To this end we compare the steady-state absorption and fluorescence spectra and picosecond time-resolved fluorescence kinetics of isolated PSI core complex and PSI–LHCI supercomplex from Pisum sativum recorded at 77 K. Gaussian decomposition of the absorption spectra revealed a broad band at 705 nm in the core complex with an oscillator strength of three chlorophylls. Additional absorption at 703 nm and 711 nm in PSI–LHCI indicated up to five red chlorophylls in the peripheral antenna. Analysis of fluorescence emission spectra resolved states emitting at 705, 715 and 722 nm in the core and additional states around 705–710 nm and 733 nm in PSI–LHCI. The red states compete with P700 in trapping excitations in the bulk antenna, which occurs on a timescale of ~20 ps. The three red forms in the core have distinct decay kinetics, probably in part determined by the rate of quenching by the oxidized P700. These results affirm that the red chlorophylls in the core complex must not be neglected when interpreting kinetic experimental results of PSI.  相似文献   

6.
Photosystem I of cyanobacteria contains different spectral pools of chlorophylls called red or long-wavelength chlorophylls that absorb at longer wavelengths than the primary electron donor P700. We measured the fluorescence spectra at the ensemble and the single-molecule level at low temperatures in the presence of oxidized and reduced P700. In accordance with the literature, it was observed that the fluorescence is quenched by P700(+). However, the efficiency of the fluorescence quenching by oxidized P700(+) was found to be extremely different for the various red states in PS I from different cyanobacteria. The emission of the longest-wavelength absorbing antenna state in PS I trimers from Thermosynechococcus elongatus (absorption maximum at 5K: ≈ 719nm; emission maximum at 5K: ≈ 740nm) was found to be strongly quenched by P700(+) similar to the reddest state in PS I trimers from Arthrospira platensis emitting at 760nm at 5K. The fluorescence of these red states is diminished by more than a factor of 10 in the presence of oxidized P700. For the first time, the emission of the reddest states in A. platensis and T. elongatus has been monitored using single-molecule fluorescence techniques.  相似文献   

7.
The cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 7942 grown under iron starvation assembles a supercomplex consisting of a trimeric Photosystem I (PSI) complex encircled by a ring of 18 CP43' or IsiA light-harvesting complexes [Nature 412 (2001) 745]. Here we present a spectroscopic characterization by temperature-dependent absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, site-selective fluorescence spectroscopy at 5 K, and circular dichroism of isolated PSI-IsiA, PSI and IsiA complexes from this cyanobacterium grown under iron starvation. The results suggest that the IsiA ring increases the absorption cross-section of PSI by about 100%. Each IsiA subunit binds about 16-17 chlorophyll a (Chl a) molecules and serves as an efficient antenna for PSI. Each of the monomers of the trimeric PSI complex contains two red chlorophylls, which presumably give rise to one exciton-coupled dimer and at 5 K absorb and fluoresce at 703 and 713 nm, respectively. The spectral properties of these C-703 chlorophylls are not affected by the presence of the IsiA antenna ring. The spectroscopic properties of the purified IsiA complexes are similar to those of the related CP43 complex from plants, except that the characteristic narrow absorption band of CP43 at 682.5 nm is missing in IsiA.  相似文献   

8.
Time-resolved fluorescence measurements were performed on isolated core and intact Photosystem I (PS I) particles and stroma membranes from Arabidopsis thaliana to characterize the type of energy-trapping kinetics in higher plant PS I. Target analysis confirms the previously proposed “charge recombination” model. No bottleneck in the energy flow from the bulk antenna compartments to the reaction center has been found. For both particles a trap-limited kinetics is realized, with an apparent charge separation lifetime of ∼6 ps. No red chlorophylls (Chls) are found in the PS I-core complex from A. thaliana. Rather, the observed red-shifted fluorescence (700-710 nm range) originates from the reaction center. In contrast, two red Chl compartments, located in the peripheral light-harvesting complexes, are resolved in the intact PS I particles (decay lifetimes 33 and 95 ps, respectively). These two red states have been attributed to the two red states found in Lhca 3 and Lhca 4, respectively. The influence of the red Chls on the slowing of the overall trapping kinetics in the intact PS I complex is estimated to be approximately four times larger than the effect of the bulk antenna enlargement.  相似文献   

9.
Picosecond time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy has been used to investigate the fluorescence emission from wild-type barley chloroplasts and from chloroplasts of the barley mutant, chlorina f-2, which lacks the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex. Cation-controlled regulation of the distribution of excitation energy was studied in isolated chloroplasts at the Fo and Fm levels. It was found that: (a) The fluorescence decay curves were distinctly non-exponential, even at low excitation intensities (less than 2 x 10(14) photons . cm(-2). (b) The fluorescence decay curves could, however, be described by a dual exponential decay law. The wild-type barley chloroplasts gave a short-lived fluorescence component of approximately 140 ps and a long-lived component of 600 ps (Fo) or 1300 ps (Fm) in the presence of Mg2+; in comparison, the mutant barley yielded a short-lived fluorescence component of approx. 50 ps and a long-lived component of 194 ps (Fo) and 424 ps (Fm). (c) The absence of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex in the mutant results in a low fluorescence quantum yield which is unaffected by the cation composition of the medium. (d) The fluorescence yield changes seen in steady-state experiments on closing Photosystem II reaction centres (Fm/Fo) or on the addition of MgCl2 (+Mg2+/-Mg2+) were in overall agreement with those calculated from the time-resolved fluorescence measurements. The results suggest that the short-lived fluorescence component is partly attributable to the chlorophyll a antenna of Photosystem I, and, in part, to those light-harvesting-Photosystem II pigment combinations which are strongly coupled to the Photosystem I antenna chlorophyll. The long-lived fluorescence component can be ascribed to the light-harvesting-Photosystem II pigment combinations not coupled with the antenna of Photosystem I. In the case of the mutant, the two components appear to be the separate emissions from the Photosystem I and Photosystem II antenna chlorophylls.  相似文献   

10.
In Cryptomonas rufescens (Cryptophyceae), phycoerythrin located in the thylakoid lumen is the major accessory pigment. Oxygen action spectra prove phycoerythrin to be efficient in trapping light energy.The fluorescence excitation spectra at ?196°C obtained by the method of Butler and Kitajima (Butler, W.L. and Kitajima, M. (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 396, 72–85) indicate that like in Rhodophycease, chlorophyll a is the exclusive light-harvesting pigment for Photosystem I.For Photosystem II we can observe two types of antennae: (1) a light-harvesting chlorophyll complex connected to Photosystem II reaction centers, which transfers excitation energy to Photosystem I reaction centers when all the Photosystem II traps are closed. (2) A light-harvesting phycoerythrin complex, which transfers excitation energy exclusively to the Photosystem II reaction complexes responsible for fluorescence at 690 nm.We conclude that in Cryptophyceae, phycoerythrin is an efficient light-harvesting pigment, organized as an antenna connected to Photosystem II centers, antenna situated in the lumen of the thylakoid. However, we cannot afford to exclude that a few parts of phycobilin pigments could be connected to inactive chlorophylls fluorescing at 690 nm.  相似文献   

11.
Single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy at 1.4K was used to investigate the spectral properties of red (long-wavelength) chlorophylls in trimeric Photosystem I (PSI) complexes from the cyanobacterium Arthrospira platensis. Three distinct red antenna states could be identified in the fluorescence spectra of single PSI trimers from A. platensis in the presence of oxidized P700. Two of them are responsible for broad emission bands centered at 726 and 760nm. These bands are similar to those found in bulk fluorescence spectra measured at cryogenic temperatures. The broad fluorescence bands at ?726 and ?760nm belong to individual emitters that are broadened by strong electron-phonon coupling giving rise to a large Stokes-shift of about 20nm and rapid spectral diffusion. An almost perpendicular orientation of the transition dipole moments of F726 and F760 has to be assumed because direct excitation energy transfer does not occur between F726 and F760. For the first time a third red state assigned to the pool absorbing around 708nm could be detected by its zero-phonon lines. The center of the zero-phonon line distribution is found at ?714nm. The spectral properties of the three red antenna states show a high similarity to the red antenna states found in trimeric PSI of Thermosynechoccocus elongatus. Based on these findings a similar organization of the red antenna states in PSI of these two cyanobacteria is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Isolated trimeric Photosystem I complexes of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus have been studied with absorption spectroscopy and site-selective polarized fluorescence spectroscopy at cryogenic temperatures. The 4 K absorption spectrum exhibits a clear and distinct peak at 710 nm and shoulders near 720, 698 and 692 nm apart from the strong absorption profile located at 680 nm. Deconvoluting the 4 K absorption spectrum with Gaussian components revealed that Synechococcus elongatus contains two types of long-wavelength pigments peaking at 708 nm and 719 nm, which we denoted C-708 and C-719, respectively. An estimate of the oscillator strengths revealed that Synechococcus elongatus contains about 4–5 C-708 pigments and 5–6 C-719 pigments. At 4 K and for excitation wavelengths shorter than 712 nm, the emission maximum appeared at 731 nm. For excitation wavelengths longer than 712 nm, the emission maximum shifted to the red, and for excitation in the far red edge of the absorption spectrum the emission maximum was observed 10–11 nm to the red with respect to the excitation wavelength, which indicates that the Stokes shift of C-719 is 10–11 nm. The fluorescence anisotropy, as calculated in the emission maximum, reached a maximal anisotropy of r=0.35 for excitation in the far red edge of the absorption spectrum (at and above 730 nm), and showed a complicated behavior for excitation at shorter wavelengths. The results suggest efficient energy transfer routes between C-708 and C-719 pigments and also among the C-719 pigments.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - FWHM full width at half maximum - PS I Photosystem I  相似文献   

13.
In this work we have investigated the origin of the multi-exponential fluorescence decay and of the short excited-state lifetime of Lhca4. Lhca4 is the antenna complex of Photosystem I which accommodates the red-most chlorophyll forms and it has been proposed that these chlorophylls can play a role in fluorescence quenching. Here we have compared the fluorescence decay of Lhca4 with that of several Lhca4 mutants that are affected in their red form content. The results show that neither the multi-exponentiality of the decay nor the fluorescence quenching is due to the red forms. The data indicate that Lhca4 exists in multiple conformations. The presence of the red forms, which are very sensitive to changes in the environment, allows to spectrally resolve the different conformations: a “blue” conformation with a short lifetime and a “red” one with a long lifetime. This finding strongly supports the idea that the members of the Lhc family are able to adopt different conformations associated with their light-harvesting and photoprotective roles. The ratio between the conformations is modified by the substitution of lutein by violaxanthin. Finally, it is demonstrated that the red forms cannot be present in the quenched conformation.  相似文献   

14.
Khoroshyy  Petro  Bína  David  Gardian  Zdenko  Litvín  Radek  Alster  Jan  Pšenčík  Jakub 《Photosynthesis research》2018,135(1-3):213-225
Photosynthesis Research - We have used time-resolved absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy with nanosecond resolution to study triplet energy transfer from chlorophylls to carotenoids in a...  相似文献   

15.
The analysis of FDMR thylakoid spectra, determined at multiple emission wavelengths, by a global decomposition technique, has revealed the presence of three previously undescribed triplet populations at emission wavelengths characteristic of Photosystem II chlorophyll/protein complexes. Their zero-field splitting parameters have been determined in order to compare them with the well-studied PSII recombination triplet state. None of these triplets have the zero-field splitting parameters characteristic of the recombination triplet and are therefore probably not generated directly in the reaction center. On the basis of their microwave-induced emission spectra, it is suggested that two are probably generated in the core complex(es) while the third may be generated in the external antenna. These triplets are formed under nonreducing redox conditions, when the recombination triplet is undetectable. It is suggested that they may be involved in the photoinhibitory damage of Photosystem II. The triplet-minus-singlet spectrum associated with the recombination triplet state has been determined for thylakoids after reduction of the secondary acceptors. Its main peak is at 685 nm, slightly red shifted with respect to earlier reports, with a weak signal, of opposite sign at approximately 675 nm. The 685 nm peak indicates that at cryogenic temperatures, the triplet is located on the long-wavelength chlorophyll state present in the reaction center complex of Photosystem II (D1.D2.Cytb(559) complex). From the absence of a clear structure in the 680 nm absorption region, this long-wavelength absorbing state does not appear to be strongly coupled to P(680), though it must be associated with one of the "inner core" pigments recently identified in the photosystem II crystallographic structure [Zouni et al. (2001) Nature 408, 739-743].  相似文献   

16.
《BBA》2020,1861(2):148136
Photosystem I core-light-harvesting antenna supercomplexes (PSI-LHCI) were isolated from the extremophilic red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae and studied by three fluorescence techniques in order to characterize chlorophylls (Chls) energetically uncoupled from the PSI reaction center (RC). Such Chls are observed in virtually all optical experiments of any PSI core and PSI-LHCI supercomplex preparations across various species and may influence the operation of PSI-based solar cells and other biohybrid systems. However, the nature of the uncoupled Chls (uChls) has never been explored deeply before. In this work, the amount of uChls was controlled by stirring the solution of C. merolae PSI-LHCI supercomplex samples at elevated temperature (~303 K) and was found to increase from <2% in control samples up to 47% in solutions stirred for 3.5 h. The fluorescence spectrum of uChls was found to be blue-shifted by ~20 nm (to ~680 nm) relative to the fluorescence band from Chls that are well coupled to PSI RC. This effect indicates that mechanical stirring leads to disappearance of some red Chls (emitting at above ~700 nm) that are present in the intact LHCI antenna associated with the PSI core. Comparative diffusion studies of control and stirred samples by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy together with biochemical analysis by SDS-PAGE and BN-PAGE indicate that energetically uncoupled Lhcr subunits are likely to be still physically attached to the PSI core, albeit with altered three-dimensional organization due to the mechanical stress.  相似文献   

17.
In this work, the spectroscopic characteristics of carotenoids associated with the antenna complexes of Photosystem I have been studied. Pigment composition, absorption spectra, and laser-induced triplet-minus-singlet (T-S) spectra were determined for native LHCI from the wild type (WT) and lut2 mutant from Arabidopsis thaliana as well as for reconstituted individual Lhca WT and mutated complexes. All WT complexes bind lutein and violaxanthin, while beta-carotene was found to be associated only with the native LHCI preparation and recombinant Lhca3. In the native complexes, the main lutein absorption bands are located at 492 and 510 nm. It is shown that violaxanthin is able to occupy all lutein binding sites, but its absorption is blue-shifted to 487 and 501 nm. The "red" lutein absorbing at 510 nm was found to be associated with Lhca3 and Lhca4 which also show a second carotenoid, peaking around 490 nm. Both these xanthophylls are involved in triplet quenching and show two T-S maxima: one at 507 nm (corresponding to the 490 nm singlet absorption) and the second at 525 nm (with absorption at 510 nm). The "blue"-absorbing xanthophyll is located in site L1 and can receive triplets from chlorophylls (Chl) 1012, 1011, and possibly 1013. The red-shifted spectral component is assigned to a lutein molecule located in the L2 site. A 510 nm lutein was also observed in the trimers of LHCII but was absent in the monomers. In the case of Lhca, the 510 nm band is present in both the monomeric and dimeric complexes. We suggest that the large red shift observed for this xanthophyll is due to interaction with the neighbor Chl 1015. In the native T-S spectrum, the contribution of carotenoids associated with Lhca2 is visible while the one of Lhca1 is not. This suggests that in the Lhca2-Lhca3 heterodimeric complex energy equilibration is not complete at least on a fast time scale.  相似文献   

18.
Microwave induced transitions in zero magnetic field have been observed in the photoinduced triplet of chloroplasts treated with dithionite by monitoring changes in the intensity of the 735 nm fluorescence band at 2 degrees K. Similar results were obtained with chloroplasts treated with hydroxylamine plus 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and preillumination. The zero field parameters are D = 0.02794 +/- 0.00007 cm-1, E = 0.00382 +/- 0.00007 cm-1, i.e. equal to those of monomeric chlorophyll a to within the experimental error. The photoinduced triplet appears to be linked to Photosystem II. This indicates that the low temperatures 735 nm fluorescence band of chloroplasts is at least partly due to Photosystem II.  相似文献   

19.
W. Junge  H. Schaffernicht  N. Nelson 《BBA》1977,462(1):73-85
The mutual orientation of pigments in Photosystem I reaction centers from spinach is evaluated by polarized photochemistry. The photoinduced linear dichroism of the absorption changes of chlorophyll a1 at 701 nm is studied as function of the excitation wavelength. The Photosystem I reaction center particles contain about 100 and if depleted about 40 chlorophylls, respectively. To prevent their rapid Brownian rotation they were immobilized on DEAE-Sephadex.The excitation spectrum of the linear dichroism reveals a high degree of order between the long axis of β-carotene and the Qy transition moments of those chlorophyll a molecules absorbing at the red end of the spectrum. The latter are the most endangered ones for destructive oxidation via their triplet state. Hence, the location of β-carotene in close proximity to and in parallel with these chlorophylls seems to be most favourable for the protective role of β-carotene within the antennae system I. It is observed that the dichroic ratio of the absorption changes of chlorophyll a1 does not exceed a figure of 43, which characterizes a circularly degenerate system, even at far red excitation (724 nm). This will hit selectively those few chlorophyll a molecules with their peak absorption at about 700 nm (including the photooxidizable dimer). We conclude, if the dimer is the only species peaking at 700 nm then the two chlorophyll a within the dimer have their y-axes oriented perpendicular to each other. If there are some antennae in addition to the dimer, the y-axes of all chlorophyll-a peaking at 700 nm form a star which accounts for the circular degeneracy of absorption.  相似文献   

20.
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