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Picosecond excitation energy transfer of allophycocyanin studied in solution and in crystals
Authors:" target="_blank">Reza Ranjbar Choubeh  Ravi R Sonani  Datta Madamwar  Paul C Struik  Arjen N Bader  Bruno Robert  Herbert van Amerongen
Institution:1.Laboratory of Biophysics,Wageningen University,Wageningen,The Netherlands;2.Post-Graduate Department of Biosciences, UGC-Centre of Advanced Study,Sardar Patel University,Anand,India;3.Commission of Atomic and Alternative Energy,Institute of Biology and Technology of Saclay,Gif-sur-Yvette,France;4.Centre for Crop Systems Analysis,Wageningen University,Wageningen,The Netherlands;5.MicroSpectroscopy Centre,Wageningen University,Wageningen,The Netherlands;6.BioSolar Cells,Wageningen,The Netherlands
Abstract:Cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis with the use of large light-harvesting antennae called phycobilisomes (PBSs). These hemispherical PBSs contain hundreds of open-chain tetrapyrrole chromophores bound to different peptides, providing an arrangement in which excitation energy is funnelled towards the PBS core from where it can be transferred to photosystem I and/or photosystem II. In the PBS core, many allophycocyanin (APC) trimers are present, red-light-absorbing phycobiliproteins that covalently bind phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophores. APC trimers were amongst the first light-harvesting complexes to be crystallized. APC trimers have two spectrally different PCBs per monomer, a high- and a low-energy pigment. The crystal structure of the APC trimer reveals the close distance (~21 Å) between those two chromophores (the distance within one monomer is ~51 Å) and this explains the ultrafast (~1 ps) excitation energy transfer (EET) between them. Both chromophores adopt a somewhat different structure, which is held responsible for their spectral difference. Here we used spectrally resolved picosecond fluorescence to study EET in these APC trimers both in crystallized and in solubilized form. We found that not all closely spaced pigment couples consist of a low- and a high-energy pigment. In ~10% of the cases, a couple consists of two high-energy pigments. EET to a low-energy pigment, which can spectrally be resolved, occurs on a time scale of tens of picoseconds. This transfer turns out to be three times faster in the crystal than in the solution. The spectral characteristics and the time scale of this transfer component are similar to what have been observed in the whole cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, for which it was ascribed to EET from C-phycocyanin to APC. The present results thus demonstrate that part of this transfer should probably also be ascribed to EET within APC trimers.
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