4.5 Article

Excitation dynamics in the LHCII complex of higher plants:: Modeling based on the 2.72 Å crystal structure

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 109, Issue 20, Pages 10493-10504

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp044082f

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We have modeled steady-state spectra and energy-transfer dynamics in the peripheral plant light-harvesting complex LHCII using new structural data (Liu, Z.; Yan, H.; Wang, K.; Kuang, T.; Zhang, J.; Gui, L.; An, X.; Chang, W. Nature. 2004, 428, 287). The dynamics of the chlorophyll (Chl) b -> Chl a transfer and decay of selectively excited bottleneck Chl a and b states have been studied by femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy. We propose an exciton model of the LHCII trimer (with specific site energies) which allows a simultaneous quantitative fit of the absorption, linear-dichroism, steady-state fluorescence spectra, and transient absorption kinetics upon excitation at different wavelengths. In the modeling we use the experimental exciton phonon spectral density and modified Redfield theory. We have found that fast b -> a transfer is determined by a good connection of the Chls b to strongly coupled Chl a clusters, i.e., a610-a61-a612 trimer and a602-a603 and a613-a614 dimers. Long-lived components of the energy-transfer kinetics are determined by a quick population of red-shifted Chl b605 and blue-shifted Chl a604 followed by a very slow Q ps for b605 and 12 ps for a604) flow of energy from these monomeric bottleneck sites to the Chl a clusters. The dynamics within the Chl a region is determined by fast (with time constants down to sub-100 fis) exciton relaxation within the a610-a61-a612 trimer, slower 200-300 fs relaxation within the a602-a603 and a613-a614 dimers, even slower 300-800 fs migration between these clusters, and very slow transfer from a604 to the quasi -equilibrated a sites. The final equilibrium is characterized by predominant population of the a610-a611-a612 cluster (mostly the a610 site). The location of this cluster on the outer side of the LHCII trimer probably provides a good connection with the other subunits of PSII.

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