4.5 Article

Low-Temperature Protein Dynamics of the B800 Molecules in the LH2 Light-Harvesting Complex: Spectral Hole Burning Study and Comparison with Single Photosynthetic Complex Spectroscopy

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 114, Issue 10, Pages 3426-3438

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp9089358

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Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. NSF [CHE-0907958]

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Previously published and new spectral hole burning (SHB) data on the B800 band of LH2 light-harvesting antenna complex of Rps. acidophila are analyzed in light of recent single photosynthetic complex spectroscopy (SPCS) results (for a review, see Berlin et al. Phys. Life Rev. 2007, 4, 64.). It is demonstrated that, in general, SHB-related phenomena observed for the B800 hand are in qualitative agreement with the SPCS data and the protein models involving multiwell multitier protein energy landscapes. Regarding the quantitative agreement, we argue that the single-molecule behavior associated with the fastest Spectral diffusion (smallest barrier) tier of the protein energy landscape is inconsistent with the SHB data, The latter discrepancy can be attributed to SPCS probing not only the dynamics of of the protein complex per Se, but also that of the Surrounding amorphous host and/or of the host-protein interface. It is argued that SHB (once improved models are developed) should also be able to provide the average magnitudes and probability distributions of light-induced spectral shifts and Could be used to determine whether SPCS probes,I set of protein complexes that are both intact and statistically relevant. SHB results are consistent with the B800 -> B850 energy-transfer models including consideration of the whole B850 density of states.

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