4.6 Article

Optoelectronic Energy Transfer at Novel Biohybrid Interfaces Using Light Harvesting Complexes from Chloroflexus aurantiacus

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 25, Issue 11, Pages 6508-6516

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la900112p

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [NSF0114434]
  2. Graduate and Professional Students Association (GPSA)
  3. Faculty Emerti Association at Arizona State University (ASU)

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In nature, nanoscale supramolecular light harvesting complexes initiate the photosynthetic energy collection process at high quantum efficiencies. In this study, the distinctive antenna structure from Chloroflexus aurantiacus-the chlorosome-is assessed for potential exploitation in novel biohybrid optoelectronic devices. Electrochemical characterization of bacterial fragments containing intact chlorosomes with the photosynthetic apparatus show an increase in the charge storage density near the working electrode upon light stimulation and suggest that chlorosomes contribute approximately one-third of the overall photocurrent. Further, isolated chlorosomes (without additional photosynthetic components, e.g., reaction centers, biochemical mediators) produce a photocurrent (similar to 8-10 nA) under light saturation conditions. Correlative experiments indicate that the main chlorosome pigment, bacteriochlorophyll-c, contributes to the photocurrent via an oxidative mechanism. The results reported herein are the first to demonstrate that isolated chlorosomes (lipid-enclosed sacs of pigments) directly transduce light energy in an electrochemical manner, laying an alternative, biomimetic approach for designing photosensitized interfaces in biofuel cells and biomedical devices, such as bioenhanced retinal prosthetics.

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