Kazuhiro J. Fujimoto, Rio Tsuji, Zheng-Yu Wang-Otomo, Takeshi Yanai
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purple bacteria possess two ring-shaped protein complexes, light-harvesting 1 (LH1) and 2 (LH2), both of which function as antennas for solar energy utilization for photosynthesis but exhibit distinct absorption properties. The two antennas have differing amounts of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a; however, their significance in spectral tuning remains elusive. Here, we report a high-precision evaluation of the physicochemical factors contributing to the variation in absorption maxima between LH1 and LH2, namely, BChl a structural distortion, protein electrostatic interaction, excitonic coupling, and charge transfer (CT) effects, as derived from detailed spectral calculations using an extended version of the exciton model, in the model purple bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum. Spectral analysis confirmed that the electronic structure of the excited state in LH1 extended to the BChl a 16-mer. Further analysis revealed that the LH1-specific redshift (∼61% in energy) is predominantly accounted for by the CT effect resulting from the closer inter-BChl distance in LH1 than in LH2. Our analysis explains how LH1 and LH2, both with chemically identical BChl a chromophores, use distinct physicochemical effects to achieve a progressive redshift from LH2 to LH1, ensuring efficient energy transfer to the reaction center special pair.
期刊介绍:
ACS Physical Chemistry Au is an open access journal which publishes original fundamental and applied research on all aspects of physical chemistry. The journal publishes new and original experimental computational and theoretical research of interest to physical chemists biophysical chemists chemical physicists physicists material scientists and engineers. An essential criterion for acceptance is that the manuscript provides new physical insight or develops new tools and methods of general interest. Some major topical areas include:Molecules Clusters and Aerosols; Biophysics Biomaterials Liquids and Soft Matter; Energy Materials and Catalysis