8 research outputs found

    Linear dichroism and circular dichroism in photosynthesis research

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    The efficiency of photosynthetic light energy conversion depends largely on the molecular architecture of the photosynthetic membranes. Linear- and circular-dichroism (LD and CD) studies have contributed significantly to our knowledge of the molecular organization of pigment systems at different levels of complexity, in pigment–protein complexes, supercomplexes, and their macroassemblies, as well as in entire membranes and membrane systems. Many examples show that LD and CD data are in good agreement with structural data; hence, these spectroscopic tools serve as the basis for linking the structure of photosynthetic pigment–protein complexes to steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy. They are also indispensable for identifying conformations and interactions in native environments, and for monitoring reorganizations during photosynthetic functions, and are important in characterizing reconstituted and artificially constructed systems. This educational review explains, in simple terms, the basic physical principles, and theory and practice of LD and CD spectroscopies and of some related quantities in the areas of differential polarization spectroscopy and microscopy

    Structure-based modeling of energy transfer in photosynthesis

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    We provide a minimal model for a structure-based simulation of excitation energy transfer in pigment–protein complexes (PPCs). In our treatment, the PPC is assembled from its building blocks. The latter are defined such that electron exchange occurs only within, but not between these units. The variational principle is applied to investigate how the Coulomb interaction between building blocks changes the character of the electronic states of the PPC. In this way, the standard exciton Hamiltonian is obtained from first principles and a hierarchy of calculation schemes for the parameters of this Hamiltonian arises. Possible extensions of this approach are discussed concerning (i) the inclusion of dispersive site energy shifts and (ii) the inclusion of electron exchange between pigments. First results on electron exchange within the special pair of photosystem II of cyanobacteria and higher plants are presented and compared with earlier results on purple bacteria. In the last part of this mini-review, the coupling of electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom is considered. First, the standard exciton–vibrational Hamiltonian is parameterized with the help of a normal mode analysis of the PPC. Second, dynamical theories are discussed that exploit this Hamiltonian in the study of dissipative exciton motion
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