scholarly journals Multicomponent Nanoscale Patterning of Functional Light‐Harvesting Protein Complexes by Local Oxidation Lithography

2020 ◽  
pp. 2001670
Author(s):  
Xia Huang ◽  
Christopher Neil Hunter ◽  
Cvetelin Vasilev
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingrid Guarnetti Prandi ◽  
Vladislav Sláma ◽  
Cristina Pecorilla ◽  
Lorenzo Cupellini ◽  
Benedetta Mennucci

Light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) are pigment-protein complexes whose main function is to capture sunlight and transfer the energy to reaction centers of photosystems. In response to varying light conditions, LH complexes also play photoregulation and photoprotection roles. In algae and mosses, a sub-family of LHCs, Light-Harvesting complex stress related (LHCSR), is responsible for photoprotective quenching. Despite their functional and evolutionary importance, no direct structural information on LHCSRs is available that can explain their unique properties. In this work we propose a structural model of LHCSR1 from the moss P. Patens, obtained through an integrated computational strategy that combines homology modeling, molecular dynamics, and multiscale quantum chemical calculations. The model is validated by reproducing the spectral properties of LHCSR1. Our model reveals the structural specificity of LHCSR1, as compared with the CP29 LH complex, and poses the basis for understanding photoprotective quenching in mosses.


1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 203-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfred R. Holzwarth ◽  
Kai Gnebenow ◽  
Kai Gnebenow ◽  
Kurt Schaffner

Abstract The interior of chlorosomes, the main antenna system of the photosynthesizing bacterium Chloroßexus aurantiacus, is shown to contain no proteins in a fixed ratio to BChl c and in amounts that could be significant of direct chromophore-protein complexes. This excludes non-covalent chromophore-protein complexing -that has so far been found in all other antennae -as the main organizational principle of the interior architecture for chlorosom es of chlorophyll C. aurantiacus. Rather, these antennae constitute the first case of a chromophore-chromophore aggregate functioning as a photosynthetic light harvesting system.


1985 ◽  
Vol 40 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 115-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Brandt ◽  
Helene Gleibs ◽  
Andrea Kohne ◽  
Wolfgang Wiessner

The seven chlorophyll-protein complexes CPIa, CPI, LHCP1, LHCP2, CPa, LHCP1 and LHCP11 known in part also from the chloroplasts of higher plants were isolated from Chlorella fusca. They were characterized by their molecular weight, their absorption maxima and their ratio of chlorophyll a/chlorophyll b. The composition of the chloropyhll-protein complexes changes during the cell cycle of Chlorella fusca. The ratio of LHCP/CPI decreases at the beginning of the light period and the ratio LHCP/CPa after the 2nd hour of the light period. Both quotients increase at the 5th hour of the light period, have a maximum at the 8th hour of the light period and decrease afterwards during the second part of the cell cycle. These altera­tions are no reflections of chlorophyll-accumulation, but cause modifications in the organization of the thylakoids and influence the photosynthetic efficiency of Chlorella fusca. The size of the PSI- and PSII-units during the cell cycle was estimated by these changes of the LHCP/CPI- and LHCP/CPa-ratios. In addition evidence is given that the assembly of LHCP1 and LHCP2 is no simple association of the monomeric forms of LHCPI or LHCPII.


2012 ◽  
Vol 367 (1608) ◽  
pp. 3455-3465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Horton

The distinctive lateral organization of the protein complexes in the thylakoid membrane investigated by Jan Anderson and co-workers is dependent on the balance of various attractive and repulsive forces. Modulation of these forces allows critical physiological regulation of photosynthesis that provides efficient light-harvesting in limiting light but dissipation of excess potentially damaging radiation in saturating light. The light-harvesting complexes (LHCII) are central to this regulation, which is achieved by phosphorylation of stromal residues, protonation on the lumen surface and de-epoxidation of bound violaxanthin. The functional flexibility of LHCII derives from a remarkable pigment composition and configuration that not only allow efficient absorption of light and efficient energy transfer either to photosystem II or photosystem I core complexes, but through subtle configurational changes can also exhibit highly efficient dissipative reactions involving chlorophyll–xanthophyll and/or chlorophyll–chlorophyll interactions. These changes in function are determined at a macroscopic level by alterations in protein–protein interactions in the thylakoid membrane. The capacity and dynamics of this regulation are tuned to different physiological scenarios by the exact protein and pigment content of the light-harvesting system. Here, the molecular mechanisms involved will be reviewed, and the optimization of the light-harvesting system in different environmental conditions described.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (12) ◽  
pp. 6502-6508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki ◽  
David J. K. Swainsbury ◽  
Daniel P. Canniffe ◽  
C. Neil Hunter ◽  
Andrew Hitchcock

Carotenoids play a number of important roles in photosynthesis, primarily providing light-harvesting and photoprotective energy dissipation functions within pigment–protein complexes. The carbon–carbon double bond (C=C) conjugation length of carotenoids (N), generally between 9 and 15, determines the carotenoid-to-(bacterio)chlorophyll [(B)Chl] energy transfer efficiency. Here we purified and spectroscopically characterized light-harvesting complex 2 (LH2) fromRhodobacter sphaeroidescontaining theN= 7 carotenoid zeta (ζ)-carotene, not previously incorporated within a natural antenna complex. Transient absorption and time-resolved fluorescence show that, relative to the lifetime of the S1state of ζ-carotene in solvent, the lifetime decreases ∼250-fold when ζ-carotene is incorporated within LH2, due to transfer of excitation energy to the B800 and B850 BChlsa. These measurements show that energy transfer proceeds with an efficiency of ∼100%, primarily via the S1→ Qxroute because the S1→ S0fluorescence emission of ζ-carotene overlaps almost perfectly with the Qxabsorption band of the BChls. However, transient absorption measurements performed on microsecond timescales reveal that, unlike the nativeN≥ 9 carotenoids normally utilized in light-harvesting complexes, ζ-carotene does not quench excited triplet states of BChla, likely due to elevation of the ζ-carotene triplet energy state above that of BChla. These findings provide insights into the coevolution of photosynthetic pigments and pigment–protein complexes. We propose that theN≥ 9 carotenoids found in light-harvesting antenna complexes represent a vital compromise that retains an acceptable level of energy transfer from carotenoids to (B)Chls while allowing acquisition of a new, essential function, namely, photoprotective quenching of harmful (B)Chl triplets.


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