35 research outputs found
Influence of the Carotenoid Composition on the Conformational Dynamics of Photosynthetic Light-Harvesting Complexes
Nonphotochemical
quenching (NPQ) is the major self-regulatory mechanism
of green plants, performed on a molecular level to protect them from
an overexcitation during the direct sunlight. It is believed that
NPQ becomes available due to conformational dynamics of the light-harvesting
photosynthetic complexes and involves a direct participation of carotenoids.
In this work, we perform a single-molecule microscopy on major light-harvesting
complexes (LHCII) from different Arabidopsis thaliana mutants exhibiting various carotenoid composition. We show how the
distinct carotenoids affect the dynamics of the conformational switching
between multiple coexisting light-emitting states of LHCII and demonstrate
that properties of the quenched conformation are not influenced by
the particular carotenoids available in LHCII. We also discuss the
possible origin of different conformational states and relate them
to the fluorescence decay kinetics observed during the bulk measurements
Singlet-triplet annihilation in single LHCII complexes
In light harvesting complex II (LHCII) of higher plants and green algae, carotenoids (Cars) have an
important function to quench chlorophyll (Chl) triplet states and therefore avoid the production of
harmful singlet oxygen. The resulting Car triplet states lead to a non-linear self-quenching mechanism
called singletâtriplet (SâT) annihilation that strongly depends on the excitation density. In this work we
investigated the fluorescence decay kinetics of single immobilized LHCIIs at room temperature and
found a two-exponential decay with a slow (3.5 ns) and a fast (35 ps) component. The relative amplitude
fraction of the fast component increases with increasing excitation intensity, and the resulting decrease
in the fluorescence quantum yield suggests annihilation effects. Modulation of the excitation pattern by
means of an acousto-optic modulator (AOM) furthermore allowed us to resolve the time-dependent
accumulation and decay rate (B7 ms) of the quenching species. Inspired by singletâsinglet (SâS) annihilation
studies, we developed a stochastic model and then successfully applied it to describe and explain all the
experimentally observed steady-state and time-dependent kinetics. That allowed us to distinctively identify
the quenching mechanism as SâT annihilation. Quantitative fitting resulted in a conclusive set of parameters
validating our interpretation of the experimental results. The obtained stochastic model can be generalized
to describe SâT annihilation in small molecular aggregates where the equilibration time of excitations is
much faster than the annihilation-free singlet excited state lifetime.VU University and by an Advanced Investigator grant from the European Research Council (no. 267333, PHOTPROT).Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, Council of Chemical Sciences (NWO-CW) via a TOP-grant (700.58.305), and by the EU FP7 project PAPETS (GA 323901).Academy Professor grant from the Netherlands Royal Academy of Sciences (KNAW). University of Pretoria's Research Development Programme (Grant No.A0W679) Research Council of Lithuania (LMT grant no. MIP-080/2015).http://www.rsc.orgpccp2016-08-31hb201
Fine control of chlorophyll-carotenoid interactions defines the functionality of light-harvesting proteins in plants
V.B. and C.D.P.D. acknowledge the support from the Leverhulme Trust RPG-2015-337. This research utilized Queen Maryâs MidPlus computational facilities, supported by QMUL Research-IT and funded by EPSRC grant EP/K000128/1. W.P.B acknowledges support from the Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award DE-SC0001035 for initial development of the TDC calculation code, as well as support from Army Research Office (ARO-MURI) Award W911NF1210420 for further development
Excitation migration in fluctuating light-harvesting antenna systems
Complex multi-exponential fluorescence decay kinetics observed in various photosynthetic systems like photosystem II (PSII) have often been explained by the reversible quenching mechanism of the charge separation taking place in the reaction center (RC) of PSII. However, this description does not account for the intrinsic dynamic disorder of the light-harvesting proteins as well as their fluctuating dislocations within the antenna, which also facilitate the repair of RCs, state transitions, and the process of non-photochemical quenching. Since dynamic fluctuations result in varying connectivity between pigmentâprotein complexes, they can also lead to non-exponential excitation decay kinetics. Based on this presumption, we have recently proposed a simple conceptual model describing excitation diffusion in a continuous medium and accounting for possible variations of the excitation transfer pathways. In the current work, this model is further developed and then applied to describe fluorescence kinetics originating from very diverse antenna systems, ranging from PSII of various sizes to LHCII aggregates and even the entire thylakoid membrane. In all cases, complex multi-exponential fluorescence kinetics are perfectly reproduced on the entire relevant time scale without assuming any radical pair equilibration at the side of the excitation quencher, but using just a few parameters reflecting the mean excitation energy transfer rate as well as the overall average organization of the photosynthetic antenn
Excitation migration in fluctuating light-harvesting antenna systems
Complex multi-exponential fluorescence decay kinetics observed in various photosynthetic systems like photosystem II (PSII) have often been explained by the reversible quenching mechanism of the charge separation taking place in the reaction center (RC) of PSII. However, this description does not account for the intrinsic dynamic disorder of the light-harvesting proteins as well as their fluctuating dislocations within the antenna, which also facilitate the repair of RCs, state transitions, and the process of non-photochemical quenching. Since dynamic fluctuations result in varying connectivity between pigmentâprotein complexes, they can also lead to non-exponential excitation decay kinetics. Based on this presumption, we have recently proposed a simple conceptual model describing excitation diffusion in a continuous medium and accounting for possible variations of the excitation transfer pathways. In the current work, this model is further developed and then applied to describe fluorescence kinetics originating from very diverse antenna systems, ranging from PSII of various sizes to LHCII aggregates and even the entire thylakoid membrane. In all cases, complex multi-exponential fluorescence kinetics are perfectly reproduced on the entire relevant time scale without assuming any radical pair equilibration at the side of the excitation quencher, but using just a few parameters reflecting the mean excitation energy transfer rate as well as the overall average organization of the photosynthetic antenn
How Photosynthetic Proteins Switch
Recent time-resolved studies have revealed the switching behavior of single photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes. In this work, we suggest a diffusion-controlled model describing essential protein dynamics underlying this switching. The calculated blinking statistics are compared with the experimental result and not only reproduce the power-law behavior at intermediate times, but also follow the experimentally observed deviations from such behavior on a shorter time scale. We propose that the coupling of fast protein dynamics to a specific slow coordinate is at the basis of regulatory switching. © 2012 American Chemical Society
Fluorescence blinking of single major light-harvesting complexes
Recent time-resolved studies have revealed the switching behavior of single photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes. In this work, we suggest a conceptual diffusion-controlled model, which is able to describe essential protein dynamics underlying this switching phenomenon. The calculated blinking statistics is compared with the experimental results measured under various experimental conditions and not only reproduces the power-law behavior at intermediate times, but also follows the experimentally observed deviations from such behavior on a shorter timescale. We find that even under ordinary light-harvesting conditions, some antenna complexes are quenched and their fraction noticeably increases in a more acid environment. As a result, the lability of the protein scaffold allows the coexistence of light-harvesting and excitation-quenching states and therefore gives rise to regulatory switching known as non-photochemical quenching. © IOP Publishing and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft
Singlet-triplet annihilation in single LHCII complexes
In light harvesting complex II (LHCII) of higher plants and green algae, carotenoids (Cars) have an important function to quench chlorophyll (Chl) triplet states and therefore avoid the production of harmful singlet oxygen. The resulting Car triplet states lead to a non-linear self-quenching mechanism called singlet-triplet (S-T) annihilation that strongly depends on the excitation density. In this work we investigated the fluorescence decay kinetics of single immobilized LHCIIs at room temperature and found a two-exponential decay with a slow (3.5 ns) and a fast (35 ps) component. The relative amplitude fraction of the fast component increases with increasing excitation intensity, and the resulting decrease in the fluorescence quantum yield suggests annihilation effects. Modulation of the excitation pattern by means of an acousto-optic modulator (AOM) furthermore allowed us to resolve the time-dependent accumulation and decay rate (âŒ7 ÎŒs) of the quenching species. Inspired by singlet-singlet (S-S) annihilation studies, we developed a stochastic model and then successfully applied it to describe and explain all the experimentally observed steady-state and time-dependent kinetics. That allowed us to distinctively identify the quenching mechanism as S-T annihilation. Quantitative fitting resulted in a conclusive set of parameters validating our interpretation of the experimental results. The obtained stochastic model can be generalized to describe S-T annihilation in small molecular aggregates where the equilibration time of excitations is much faster than the annihilation-free singlet excited state lifetime
Excitation Migration, Quenching, and Regulation of Photosynthetic Light Harvesting in Photosystem II
Excitation energy transfer and quenching in LHCII aggregates is considered in terms of a coarse-grained model. The model assumes that the excitation energy transfer within a pigment-protein complex is much faster than the intercomplex excitation energy transfer, whereas the quenching ability is attributed to a specific pigment-protein complex responsible for the nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ). It is demonstrated that the pump-probe experimental data obtained at low excitation intensities for LHCII aggregates under NPQ conditions can be equally well explained at two limiting cases, either describing the excitation kinetics in the migration-limited or in the trap-limited regime. Thus, it is concluded that low excitation conditions do not allow one to unambiguously define the relationship between the mean times of excitation migration and trapping. However, this could be achieved by using high excitation conditions when exciton-exciton annihilation is dominant. In this case it was found that in the trap-limited regime the excitation kinetics in the aggregate should be almost insensitive to the excitation density, meaning that singlet-singlet annihilation has little effect on the NPQ decay kinetics, whereas in the migration-limited case there is a clear intensity dependence. In order to account for the random distribution of the NPQ-traps within the LHCII aggregates, excitation diffusion in a continuous medium with random static traps was considered. This description demonstrates a very good correspondence to the experimental fluorescence kinetics assuming a lamellar (quasi-3D) structure of the antenna characterized by the dimension d = 2.4 and therefore justifying the diffusion-limited approach on which the model is based. Using the coarse-grained model to describe the aggregate we estimate one NPQ-trap per 100 monomeric LHCII complexes. Finally we discuss the origin of the traps responsible for excitation quenching under NPQ conditions. © 2011 American Chemical Society