4.4 Article

Identifying the lowest electronic states of the chlorophylls in the CP47 core antenna protein of photosystem II

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 41, Issue 51, Pages 15224-15233

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi0261948

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CP47 is a pigment-protein complex in the core of photosystem H that tranfers excitation energy to the reaction center. Here we report on a spectroscopic investigation of the isolated CP47 complex. By deconvoluting the 77 K absorption and linear dichroism, red-most states at 683 and 690 nm have been identified with oscillator strengths corresponding to similar to3 and similar to1 chlorophyll, respectively- Both states contribute to the 4 K emission, and the Stark spectrum shows that they have a large value for the difference polarizability between their ground and excited states. From site-selective polarized triplet-minus-singlet spectra, an excitonic origin for the 683 nm state was found. The red shift of the 690 run state is most probably due to strong hydrogen bonding to a protein ligand, as follows from the position of the stretch frequency of the chlorophyll 131 keto group (1633 cm(-1)) in the fluorescence line narrowing spectrum at 4 K upon red-most excitation. We discuss how the 683 and 690 nm states may be linked to specific chlorophylls in the crystal structure [Zouni, A., Witt, H.-T., Kern, J., Fromme, P., Krauss, N., Saenger, W., and Orth, P. (2001) Nature 409, 739-743].

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