4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Photosynthesis supported by a chlorophyll f-dependent, entropy-driven uphill energy transfer in Halomicronema hongdechloris cells adapted to far-red light

Journal

PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESEARCH
Volume 139, Issue 1-3, Pages 185-201

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11120-018-0556-2

Keywords

Halomicronema hongdechloris; Chlorophyll f; Light harvesting; (Uphill) excitation energy transfer; Entropy; Decay-associated spectra

Categories

Funding

  1. German Ministry of Education and Research (WTZ-RUS) [01DJ15007]
  2. Hochschulpakt Lehre III/TU-WIMIplus program
  3. German Research Foundation (Cluster of Excellence Unifying Concepts in Catalysis)
  4. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [18-04-00554]
  5. Russian Science Foundation [14-14-00039]
  6. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Translational Photosynthesis [CE140100015]
  7. JSPS [26220801, 17K07453, 18H05177]
  8. JST PRESTO
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H05177, 17K07453] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The phototrophic cyanobacterium Halomicronema hongdechloris shows far-red light-induced accumulation of chlorophyll (Chl) f, but the involvement of the pigment in photosynthetic energy harvesting by photosystem (PS) II is controversially discussed. While H. hongdechloris contains negligible amounts of Chl f in white-light culture conditions, the ratio of Chl f to Chl a is reversibly changed up to 1:8 under illumination with far-red light (720-730nm). We performed UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, time-integrated and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy for the calculation of decay-associated spectra (DAS) to determine excitation energy transfer (EET) processes between photosynthetic pigments in intact H. hongdechloris filaments. In cells grown under white light, highly efficient EET occurs from phycobilisomes (PBSs) to Chl a with an apparent time constant of about 100ps. Charge separation occurs with a typical apparent time constant of 200-300ps from Chl a. After 3-4 days of growth under far-red light, robust Chl f content was observed in H. hongdechloris and EET from PBSs reached Chl f efficiently within 200ps. It is proposed based on mathematical modeling by rate equation systems for EET between the PBSs and PSII and subsequent electron transfer (ET) that charge separation occurs from Chl a and excitation energy is funneled from Chl f to Chl a via an energetically uphill EET driven by entropy, which is effective because the number of Chl a molecules coupled to Chl f is at least eight- to tenfold larger than the corresponding number of Chl f molecules. The long lifetime of Chl f molecules in contact to a tenfold larger pool of Chl a molecules allows Chl f to act as an intermediate energy storage level, from which the Gibbs free energy difference between Chl f and Chl a can be overcome by taking advantage from the favorable ratio of degeneracy coefficients, which formally represents a significant entropy gain in the Eyring formulation of the Arrhenius law. Direct evidence for energetically uphill EET and charge separation in PSII upon excitation of Chl f via anti-Stokes fluorescence in far-red light-adapted H. hongdechloris cells was obtained: Excitation by 720nm laser light resulted in robust Chl a fluorescence at 680nm that was distinctly temperature-dependent and, notably, increased upon DCMU (3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea) treatment in far-red light-adapted cells. Thus, rather than serving as an excitation energy trap, Chl f in far-red light-adapted H. hongdechloris cells is directly contributing to oxygenic photosynthesis at PSII.

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