4.5 Article

Excitation Energy Trapping and Dissipation by Ni-Substituted Bacteriochlorophyll a in Reconstituted LH1 Complexes from Rhodospirillum rubrum

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 117, Issue 38, Pages 11260-11271

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp4020977

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LaserLab Europe [LCVU-1606]
  2. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund [OTKA-PD 104530, TAMOP-4.2.2A-11/1/KONV-2012-0060]
  3. Hungarian National Innovation Office
  4. A*STAR Singapore [NIH-A*STAR TET_10-1-2011-0279]
  5. European Commission [EC-MC ITN 238017 HARVEST]
  6. European Research Council [267333 PHOTPROT]
  7. Foundation for Polish Science [TEAM/2010-5/3]

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Bacteriochlorophyll a with Ni2+ replacing the central Me2+ ion was used as an ultrafast excitation energy dissipation center in reconstituted bacterial LH1 complexes. B870, a carotenoid-less LH1 complex, and B880, an LH1 complex containing spheroidene, were obtained via reconstitution from the subunits isolated from chromatophores of Rhodospirillum rubrum. Ni-substituted bacteriochlorophyll a added to the reconstitution mixture partially substituted the native pigment in both forms of LH1. The excited-state dynamics of the reconstituted LH1 complexes were probed by femtosecond pump probe transient absorption spectroscopy in the visible and near-infrared spectral region. Spheroidene-binding B880 containing no excitation dissipation centers displayed complex dynamics in the time range of 0.1-10 ps, reflecting internal conversion and intersystem crossing in the carotenoid, exciton relaxation in BChl complement, and energy transfer from carotenoid to the latter. In B870, some aggregation-induced excitation energy quenching was present. The binding of Ni-BChl a to both B870 and B880 resulted in strong quenching of the excited states with main deexcitation lifetime of ca. 2 ps. The LH1 excited-state lifetime could be modeled with an intrinsic decay time constant in Ni-substituted bacteriochlorophyll a of 160 fs. The presence of carotenoid in LH1 did not influence the kinetics of energy trapping by Ni-BChl unless the carotenoid was directly excited, in which case the kinetics was limited by a slower carotenoid SI to bacteriochlorophyll energy transfer.

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