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1.
Chlorophyll (Chl) d is a major chlorophyll in a novel oxygenic prokaryote Acaryochloris marina. Here we first report the redox potential of Chl d in vitro. The oxidation potential of Chl d was +0.88 V vs. SHE in acetonitrile; the value was higher than that of Chl a (+0.81 V) and lower than that of Chl b (+0.94 V). The oxidation potential order, Chl b>Chl d>Chl a, can be explained by inductive effect of substituent groups on the conjugated pi-electron system on the macrocycle. Corresponding pheophytins showed the same order; Phe b (+1.25 V)>Phe d (+1.21 V)>Phe a (+1.14 V), but the values were significantly higher than those of Chls, which are rationalized in terms of an electron density decrease in the pi-system by the replacement of magnesium with more electronegative hydrogen. Consequently, oxidation potential of Chl a was found to be the lowest among Chls and Phes. The results will help us to broaden our views on photosystems in A. marina.  相似文献   

2.
The dicarbonyl and diphosphine complexes of the type (η5-C5H5)Fe(L)2ER3 (L2 = (CO)2 (a), (Ph2P)2CH2 (b); ER3 = CH3 (1a/b); SiMe3 (2a/b), GeMe3 (3a/b), SnMe3 (4a/b)) were synthesized and studied electrochemically. Cyclic voltammetric studies on the dicarbonyl complexes 1a-4a revealed one electron irreversible oxidation processes whereas the same processes for the chelating phosphine series 1b-4b were reversible. The Eox values found for the series 1a-4a were in the narrow range 1.3-1.5 V and in the order Si > Sn ≈ Ge > C; those for 1b-4b (involving replacement of the excellent retrodative π-accepting CO ligands by the superior σ-donor and poorer π-accepting phosphines) have much lower oxidation potentials in the sequence Sn > Si ≈ Ge > C. This latter oxidation potential pattern relates directly to the solution 31P NMR chemical shift data illustrating that stronger donation lowers the Eox for the complexes; however, simple understanding of the trend must await the results of a current DFT analysis of the systems.  相似文献   

3.
A ‘metal-free’ chlorophyll (Chl) a, pheophytin (Phe) a, functions as the primary electron acceptor in PS II. On the basis of Phe a/PS II = 2, Phe a content is postulated as an index for estimation of the stoichiometry of pigments and photosystems. We found Phe a in a Chl d-dominant cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina, whereas Phe d was absent. The minimum Chl a:Phe a ratio was 2:2, indicating that the primary electron donor is Chl a, accessory is Chl d, and the primary electron acceptor is Phe a in PS II of A. marina. Chl d was artificially formed by the treatment of Chl a with papain in aqueous organic solvents. Further, we will raise a key question on the mechanisms of water oxidation in PS II.  相似文献   

4.
In algae, light-harvesting complexes contain specific chlorophylls (Chls) and keto-carotenoids; Chl a, Chl c, and fucoxanthin (Fx) in diatoms and brown algae; Chl a, Chl c, and peridinin in photosynthetic dinoflagellates; and Chl a, Chl b, and siphonaxanthin in green algae. The Fx–Chl a/c-protein (FCP) complex from the diatom Chaetoceros gracilis contains Chl c1, Chl c2, and the keto-carotenoid, Fx, as antenna pigments, in addition to Chl a. In the present study, we investigated energy transfer in the FCP complex associated with photosystem II (FCPII) of C. gracilis. For these investigations, we analyzed time-resolved fluorescence spectra, fluorescence rise and decay curves, and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy data. Chl a exhibited different energy forms with fluorescence peaks ranging from 677 nm to 688 nm. Fx transferred excitation energy to lower-energy Chl a with a time constant of 300 fs. Chl c transferred excitation energy to Chl a with time constants of 500–600 fs (intra-complex transfer), 600–700 fs (intra-complex transfer), and 4–6 ps (inter-complex transfer). The latter process made a greater contribution to total Chl c-to-Chl a transfer in intact cells of C. gracilis than in the isolated FCPII complexes. The lower-energy Chl a received excitation energy from Fx and transferred the energy to higher-energy Chl a. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: Keys to Produce Clean Energy.  相似文献   

5.
Antenna complexes are key components of plant photosynthesis, the process that converts sunlight, CO2, and water into oxygen and sugars. We report the first (to our knowledge) femtosecond transient absorption study on the light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes CP26 (Lhcb5) and CP24 (Lhcb6) of Photosystem II. The complexes are excited at three different wavelengths in the chlorophyll (Chl) Qy region. Both complexes show a single subpicosecond Chl b to Chl a transfer process. In addition, a reduction in the population of the intermediate states (in the 660-670 nm range) as compared to light-harvesting complex II is correlated in CP26 to the absence of both Chls a604 and b605. However, Chl forms around 670 nm are still present in the Chl a Qy range, which undergoes relaxation with slow rates (10-15 ps). This reduction in intermediate-state amplitude CP24 shows a distinctive narrow band at 670 nm connected with Chls b and decaying to the low-energy Chl a states in 3-5 ps. This 670 nm band, which is fully populated in 0.6 ps together with the Chl a low-energy states, is proposed to originate from Chl 602 or 603. In this study, we monitored the energy flow within two minor complexes, and our results may help elucidate these structures in the future.  相似文献   

6.
Absorbance difference spectroscopy and redox titrations have been applied to investigate the properties of photosystem I from the chlorophyll d containing cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina. At room temperature, the (P740+ − P740) and (FA/B − FA/B) absorbance difference spectra were recorded in the range between 300 and 1000 nm while at cryogenic temperatures, (P740+A1 − P740A1) and (3P740 − P740) absorbance difference spectra have been measured. Spectroscopic and kinetic evidence is presented that the cofactors involved in the electron transfer from the reduced secondary electron acceptor, phylloquinone (A1), to the terminal electron acceptor and their structural arrangement are virtually identical to those of chlorophyll a containing photosystem I. The oxidation potential of the primary electron donor P740 of photosystem I has been reinvestigated. We find a midpoint potential of 450 ± 10 mV in photosystem I-enriched membrane fractions as well as in thylakoids which is very similar to that found for P700 in chlorophyll a dominated organisms. In addition, the extinction difference coefficient for the oxidation of the primary donor has been determined and a value of 45,000 ± 4000 M− 1 cm− 1 at 740 nm was obtained. Based on this value the ratio of P740 to chlorophyll is calculated to be 1:~ 200 chlorophyll d in thylakoid membranes. The consequences of our findings for the energetics in photosystem I of A. marina are discussed as well as the pigment stoichiometry and spectral characteristics of P740.  相似文献   

7.
We use femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy to study chlorophyll (Chl)-Chl energy transfer in the peridinin-chlorophyll protein (PCP) reconstituted with mixtures of either chlorophyll b (Chlb) and Chld or Chla and bacteriochlorophyll a (BChla). Analysis of absorption and transient absorption spectra demonstrated that reconstitution with chlorophyll mixtures produces a significant fraction of PCP complexes that contains a different Chl in each domain of the PCP monomer. The data also suggest that binding affinity of Chla is less than that of the other three Chl species. By exciting the Chl species lying at higher energy, we obtained energy transfer times of 40 ± 5 ps (Chlb-Chld) and 59 ± 3 ps (Chla-BChla). The experimental values match those obtained from the Förster equation, 36 and 50 ps, respectively, showing that energy transfer proceeds via the Förster mechanism. Excitation of peridinin in the PCP complex reconstituted with Chla/BChla mixture provided time constants of 2.6 and 0.4 ps for the peridinin-Chla and peridinin-BChla energy transfer, matching those obtained from studies of PCP complexes reconstituted with single chlorophyll species.  相似文献   

8.
Diatoms occupy a key position as a primary producer in the global aquatic ecosystem. We developed methods to isolate highly intact thylakoid membranes and the photosystem I (PS I) complex from a marine centric diatom, Chaetoceros gracilis. The PS I reaction center (RC) was purified as a super complex with light-harvesting fucoxanthin-chlorophyll (Chl)-binding proteins (FCP). The super complex contained 224 Chl a, 22 Chl c, and 55 fucoxanthin molecules per RC. The apparent molecular mass of the purified FCP-PS I super complex (∼ 1000 kDa) indicated that the super complex was composed of a monomer of the PS I RC complex and about 25 copies of FCP. The complex contained menaquinone-4 as the secondary electron acceptor A1 instead of phylloquinone. Time-resolved fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K indicated that fast (16 ps) energy transfer from a Chl a band at 685 nm on FCP to Chls on the PS I RC complex occurs. The ratio of fucoxanthin to Chl a on the PS I-bound FCP was lower than that of weakly bound FCP, suggesting that PS I-bound FCP specifically functions as the mediator of energy transfer between weakly bound FCPs and the PS I RC.  相似文献   

9.
The triplet state of the carotenoid peridinin, populated by triplet-triplet energy transfer from photoexcited chlorophyll triplet state, in the reconstituted Peridinin-Chlorophyll a-protein, has been investigated by ODMR (Optically detected magnetic resonance), and pulse EPR spectroscopies. The properties of peridinins associated with the triplet state formation in complexes reconstituted with Chl a and Chl d have been compared to those of the main-form peridinin-chlorophyll protein (MFPCP) isolated from Amphidinium carterae. In the reconstituted samples no signals due to the presence of chlorophyll triplet states have been detected, during either steady state illumination or laser-pulse excitation. This demonstrates that reconstituted complexes conserve total quenching of chlorophyll triplet states, despite the biochemical treatment and reconstitution with the non-native Chl d pigment. Zero field splitting parameters of the peridinin triplet states are the same in the two reconstituted samples and slightly smaller than in native MFPCP. Analysis of the initial polarization of the photoinduced Electron-Spin-Echo detected spectra and their time evolution, shows that, in the reconstituted complexes, the triplet state is probably localized on the same peridinin as in native MFPCP although, when Chl d replaces Chl a, a local rearrangement of the pigments is likely to occur. Substitution of Chl d for Chl a identifies previously unassigned bands at ∼ 620 and ∼ 640 nm in the Triplet-minus-Singlet (T − S) spectrum of PCP detected at cryogenic temperature, as belonging to peridinin.  相似文献   

10.

DMSO (dimethyl sulphoxide, (CH3)2SO) is an alternative solvent for spectroscopic assay of chlorophylls (Chls) but has mainly been used on Chl a & b organisms. Here, we develop algorithms for the estimation of Chl a, b & c1c2, and d in DMSO solvent. The common unicellular green alga Chlorella sp. (Chl a & b) is used as an example of an oxygenic photo-organism with Chl a as the primary photosynthetic pigment and Chl b as the accessory Chl. The cyanobacterium Synechococcus is used as an example of organisms containing only Chl a. The diatom Chaetoceros sp. is used as the representative Chl a & c1c2 organism. The unusual chlorobacterium Acaryochloris marina has Chl d & a. Algorithms for use on mixed phytoplankton and algal mats (Chl a, b & c) were also developed. The algorithms for DMSO solvent are compared to those developed for 90% acetone as the benchmark solvent. DMSO solvent offers the advantages of low volatility, low toxicity, low flammability, biodegradability, and ease of transport and is an effective extractant of chlorophylls. However, there appear to be significant storage problems with DMSO extracts of chlorophylls because of its high freezing point (+18.4°C) and probable breakdown in chlorophylls in DMSO over several days.

  相似文献   

11.
A universal set of equations for determining chlorophyll (Chl) a, accessory Chl b, c, and d, and total Chl have been developed for 90 % acetone, 100 % methanol, and ethanol solvents suitable for estimating Chl in extracts from natural assemblages of algae. The presence of phaeophytin (Ph) a not only interferes with estimates of Chl a but also with Chl b and c determinations. The universal algorithms can hence be misleading if used on natural collections containing large amounts of Ph. The methanol algorithms are severely affected by the presence of Ph and so are not recommended. The algorithms were tested on representative mixtures of Chls prepared from extracts of algae with known Chl composition. The limits of detection (and inherent error, ±95 % confidence limit) for all the Chl equations were less than 0.03 g m−3. The algorithms are both accurate and precise for Chl a and d but less accurate for Chl b and c. With caution the algorithms can be used to calculate a Chl profile of natural assemblages of algae. The relative error of measurements of Chls increases hyperbolically in diluted extracts. For safety reasons, efficient extraction of Chls and the convenience of being able to use polystyrene cuvettes, the algorithms for ethanol are recommended for routine assays of Chls in natural assemblages of aquatic plants.  相似文献   

12.
Changes in photosynthetic pigment ratios showed that the Chlorophyll d-dominated oxyphotobacterium Acaryochloris marina was able to photoacclimate to different light regimes. Chl d per cell were higher in cultures grown under low irradiance and red or green light compared to those found when grown under high white light, but phycocyanin/Chl d and carotenoid/Chl d indices under the corresponding conditions were lower. Chl a, considered an accessory pigment in this organism, decreased respective to Chl d in low irradiance and low intensity non-white light sources. Blue diode PAM (Pulse Amplitude Modulation) fluorometry was able to be used to measure photosynthesis in Acaryochloris. Light response curves for Acaryochloris were created using both PAM and O2 electrode. A linear relationship was found between electron transport rate (ETR), measured using a PAM fluorometer, and oxygen evolution (net and gross photosynthesis). Gross photosynthesis and ETR were directly proportional to one another. The optimum light for white light (quartz halogen) was about 206 ± 51 μmol m− 2 s− 1 (PAR) (Photosynthetically Active Radiation), whereas for red light (red diodes) the optimum light was lower (109 ± 27 μmol m− 2 s− 1 (PAR)). The maximum mean gross photosynthetic rate of Acaryochloris was 73 ± 7 μmol mg Chl d− 1 h− 1. The gross photosynthesis/respiration ratio (Pg/R) of Acaryochloris under optimum conditions was about 4.02 ± 1.69. The implications of our findings will be discussed in relation to how photosynthesis is regulated in Acaryochloris.  相似文献   

13.
We combine ensemble and single-molecule spectroscopy to gain insight into the energy transfer between chlorophylls (Chls) in peridinin-chlorophyll-protein (PCP) complexes reconstituted with Chl a, Chl b, as well as both Chl a and Chl b. The main focus is the heterochlorophyllous system (Chl a/b-N-PCP), and reference information essential to interpret experimental observations is obtained from homochlorophyllous complexes. Energy transfer between Chls in Chl a/b-N-PCP takes place from Chl b to Chl a and also from Chl a to Chl b with comparable Förster energy transfer rates of 0.0324 and 0.0215 ps−1, respectively. Monte Carlo simulations yield the ratio of 39:61 for the excitation distribution between Chl a and Chl b, which is larger than the equilibrium distribution of 34:66. An average Chl a/Chl b fluorescence intensity ratio of 66:34 is measured, however, for single Chl a/b-N-PCP complexes excited into the peridinin (Per) absorption. This difference is attributed to almost three times more efficient energy transfer from Per to Chl a than to Chl b. The results indicate also that due to bilateral energy transfer, the Chl system equilibrates only partially during the excited state lifetimes.  相似文献   

14.
Various plants possess hydrophilic chlorophyll (Chl) proteins known as water-soluble Chl-binding proteins (WSCPs). WSCPs exist in two forms: Class I and Class II, of which Class I alone exhibits unique photoconvertibility. Although numerous genes encoding Class II WSCPs have been identified and the molecular properties of their recombinant proteins have been well characterized, no Class I WSCP gene has been identified to date. In this study, we cloned the cDNA and a gene encoding the Class I WSCP of Chenopodium album (CaWSCP). Sequence analyses revealed that CaWSCP comprises a single exon corresponding to 585 bp of an open reading frame encoding 195 amino acid residues. The CaWSCP protein sequence possesses a signature of DUF538, a protein superfamily of unknown function found almost exclusively in Embryophyta. The recombinant CaWSCP was expressed in Escherichia coli as a hexa-histidine fusion protein (CaWSCP-His) that removes Chls from the thylakoid. Under visible light illumination, the reconstituted CaWSCP-His was successfully photoconverted into a different pigment with an absorption spectrum identical to that of native CaWSCP. Interestingly, while CaWSCP-His could bind both Chl a and Chl b, photoconversion occurred only in CaWSCP-His reconstituted with Chl a.  相似文献   

15.
The magnesium atom of chlorophylls (Chls) is always five- or six-coordinated within chlorophyll-protein complexes which are the main light-harvesting systems of plants, algae and most photosynthetic bacteria. Due to the presence of stereocenters and the axial ligation of magnesium the two faces of Chls are diastereotopic. It has been previously recognized that the α-configuration having the magnesium ligand on the opposite face of the 17-propionic acid moiety is more frequently encountered and is more stable than the more seldom β-configuration that has the magnesium ligand on the same face [T.S. Balaban, P. Fromme, A.R. Holzwarth, N. Krauβ, V.I. Prokhorenko, Relevance of the diastereotopic ligation of magnesium atoms in chlorophylls in Photosystem I, Biochim. Biophys. Acta (Bioenergetics), 1556 (2002) 197-207; T. Oba, H. Tamiaki, Which side of the π-macrocycle plane of (bacterio)chlorophylls is favored for binding of the fifth ligand? Photosynth. Res. 74 (2002) 1-10]. In photosystem I only 14 Chls out of a total of 96 are in a β-configuration and these occupy preferential positions around the reaction center. We have now analyzed the α/β dichotomy in the homodimeric photosystem II based on the 2.9 Å resolution crystal structure [A. Guskov, J. Kern, A. Gabdulkhakov, M. Broser, A. Zouni, W. Saenger, Cyanobacterial photosystem II at 2.9 Å resolution: role of quinones, lipids, channels and chloride, Nature Struct. Mol. Biol. 16 (2009) 334-342] and find that out of 35 Chls in each monomer only 9 are definitively in the β-configuration, while 4 are uncertain. Ab initio calculations using the approximate coupled-cluster singles-and-doubles model CC2 [O. Christiansen, H. Koch, P. Jørgensen, The second-order approximate coupled cluster singles and doubles model CC2, Chem. Phys. Lett. 243 (1995) 409-418] now correctly predict the absorption spectra of Chls a and b and conclusively show for histidine, which is the most frequent axial ligand of magnesium in chlorophyll-protein complexes, that only slight differences (< 4 nm) are encountered between the α- and β-configurations. Significant red shifts (up to 50 nm) can, however, be encountered in excitonically coupled β-β-Chl dimers. Surprisingly, in both photosystems I and II very similar “special” β-β dimers are encountered at practically the same distances from P700 and P680, respectively. In purple bacteria LH2, the B850 ring is composed exclusively of such tightly coupled β-bacteriochlorophylls a. A statistical analysis of the close contacts with the protein matrix (< 5 Å) shows significant differences between the α- and β-configurations and the subunit providing the axial magnesium ligand. The present study allows us to conclude that the excitation energy transfer in light-harvesting systems, from a peripheral antenna towards the reaction center, may follow preferential pathways due to structural reasons involving β-ligated Chls.  相似文献   

16.
Markus Grabolle 《BBA》2005,1708(2):209-218
Photon absorption by one of the roughly 200 chlorophylls of the plant Photosystem II (PSII) results in formation of an equilibrated excited state (Chl200*) and is followed by chlorophyll oxidation (formation of P680+) coupled to reduction of a specific pheophytin (Phe), then electron transfer from Phe− to a firmly bound quinone (QA), and subsequently reduction of P680+ by a redox-active tyrosine residue denoted as Z. The involved free-energy differences (ΔG) and redox potentials are of prime interest. Oxygen-evolving PSII membrane particles of spinach were studied at 5 °C. By analyzing the delayed and prompt Chl fluorescence, we determined the equilibrium constant and thus free-energy difference between Chl200* and the [Z+,QA−] radical pair to be −0.43 ± 0.025 eV, at 10 μs after the photon absorption event for PSII in its S3-state. On basis of this value and previously published results, the free-energy difference between P680* and [P680+,QA−] is calculated to be −0.50 ± 0.04 eV; the free-energy loss associated with electron transfer from Phe to QA is found to be 0.34 ± 0.04 eV. The given uncertainty ranges do not represent a standard deviation or likely error, but an estimate of the maximal error. Assuming a QA−/QA redox potential of −0.08 V [Krieger et al., 1995, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1229, 193], the following redox-potential estimates are obtained: +1.25 V for P680/P680+; +1.21 V for Z/Z+ (at 10 μs); −0.42 V for Phe−/Phe; −0.58 V for P680*/P680+.  相似文献   

17.
《BBA》2020,1861(7):148191
Light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) from the marine green macroalga Bryopsis corticulans is spectroscopically characterized to understand the structural and functional changes resulting from adaptation to intertidal environment. LHCII is homologous to its counterpart in land plants but has a different carotenoid and chlorophyll (Chl) composition. This is reflected in the steady-state absorption, fluorescence, linear dichroism, circular dichroism and anisotropic circular dichroism spectra. Time-resolved fluorescence and two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy were used to investigate the consequences of this adaptive change in the pigment composition on the excited-state dynamics. The complex contains additional Chl b spectral forms – absorbing at around 650 nm and 658 nm – and lacks the red-most Chl a forms compared with higher-plant LHCII. Similar to plant LHCII, energy transfer between Chls occurs on timescales from under hundred fs (mainly from Chl b to Chl a) to several picoseconds (mainly between Chl a pools). However, the presence of long-lived, weakly coupled Chl b and Chl a states leads to slower exciton equilibration in LHCII from B. corticulans. The finding demonstrates a trade-off between the enhanced absorption of blue-green light and the excitation migration time. However, the adaptive change does not result in a significant drop in the overall photochemical efficiency of Photosystem II. These results show that LHCII is a robust adaptable system whose spectral properties can be tuned to the environment for optimal light harvesting.  相似文献   

18.
Minor but key chlorophylls (Chls) and quinones in photosystem (PS) I-type reaction centers (RCs) are overviewed in regard to their molecular structures. In the PS I-type RCs, the prime-type chlorophylls, namely, bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a′ in green sulfur bacteria, BChl g′ in heliobacteria, Chl a′ in Chl a-type PS I, and Chl d′ in Chl d-type PS I, function as the special pairs, either as homodimers, (BChl a′)2 and (BChl g′)2 in anoxygenic organisms, or heterodimers, Chl a/a′ and Chl d/d′ in oxygenic photosynthesis. Conversions of BChl g to Chl a and Chl a to Chl d take place spontaneously under mild condition in vitro. The primary electron acceptors, A 0, are Chl a-derivatives even in anoxygenic PS I-type RCs. The secondary electron acceptors are naphthoquinones, whereas the side chains may have been modified after the birth of cyanobacteria, leading to succession from menaquinone to phylloquinone in oxygenic PS I.  相似文献   

19.
Cytochrome bd is a terminal component of the respiratory chain of Escherichia coli catalyzing reduction of molecular oxygen to water. It contains three hemes, b558, b595, and d. The detailed spectroelectrochemical redox titration and numerical modeling of the data reveal significant redox interaction between the low-spin heme b558 and high-spin heme b595, whereas the interaction between heme d and either hemes b appears to be rather weak. However, the presence of heme d itself decreases much larger interaction between the two hemes b. Fitting the titration data with a model where redox interaction between the hemes is explicitly included makes it possible to extract individual absorption spectra of all hemes. The α- and β-band reduced-minus-oxidized difference spectra agree with the data published earlier ([22] J.G. Koland, M.J. Miller, R.B. Gennis, Potentiometric analysis of the purified cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex from Escherichia coli, Biochemistry 23 (1984) 1051-1056., and [23] R.M. Lorence, J.G. Koland, R.B. Gennis, Coulometric and spectroscopic analysis of the purified cytochrome d complex of Escherichia coli: evidence for the identification of “cytochrome a1” as cytochrome b595, Biochemistry 25 (1986) 2314-2321.). The Soret band spectra show λmax = 429.5 nm, λmin ≈ 413 nm (heme b558), λmax = 439 nm, λmin ≈ 400 ± 1 nm (heme b595), and λmax = 430 nm, λmin = 405 nm (heme d). The spectral contribution of heme d to the complex Soret band is much smaller than those of either hemes b; the Soret/α (ΔA430A629) ratio for heme d is 1.6.  相似文献   

20.
The light-harvesting 2 complex (LH2) of the purple phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides is a highly efficient, light-harvesting antenna that allows growth under a wide-range of light intensities. In order to expand the spectral range of this antenna complex, we first used a series of competition assays to measure the capacity of the non-native pigments 3-acetyl chlorophyll (Chl) a, Chl?d, Chl?f or bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) b to replace native BChl?a in the B800 binding site of LH2. We then adjusted the B800 site and systematically assessed the binding of non-native pigments. We find that Arg?10 of the LH2 β polypeptide plays a crucial role in binding specificity, by providing a hydrogen-bond to the 3-acetyl group of native and non-native pigments. Reconstituted LH2 complexes harbouring the series of (B)Chls were examined by transient absorption and steady-state fluorescence spectroscopies. Although slowed 10-fold to ~6?ps, energy transfer from Chl?a to B850 BChl?a remained highly efficient. We measured faster energy-transfer time constants for Chl?d (3.5?ps) and Chl?f (2.7?ps), which have red-shifted absorption maxima compared to Chl?a. BChl?b, red-shifted from the native BChl?a, gave extremely rapid (≤0.1?ps) transfer. These results show that modified LH2 complexes, combined with engineered (B)Chl biosynthesis pathways in vivo, have potential for retaining high efficiency whilst acquiring increased spectral range.  相似文献   

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