The origin of the unusual Q(y) red shift in LH1-RC complexes from purple bacteria Thermochromatium tepidum as revealed by Stark absorption spectroscopy

F. Ma, L.J. Yu, Z.Y. Wang-Otomo, R. van Grondelle

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Native LH1-RC of photosynthetic purple bacteria Thermochromatium (Tch.) tepidum, B915, has an ultra-red BChl a Q<inf>y</inf> absorption. Two blue-shifted complexes obtained by chemical modification, B893 and B882, have increasing full widths at half maximum (FWHM) and decreasing transition dipole oscillator strength. 77 K Stark absorption spectroscopy studies were employed for the three complexes, trying to understand the origin of the 915 nm absorption. We found that Tr(δα) and |δμ| of both Q<inf>y</inf> and carotenoid (Car) bands are larger than for other purple bacterial LH complexes reported previously. Moreover, the red shifts of the Q<inf>y</inf> bands are associated with (1) increasing Tr(δα) and |δμ| of the Q<inf>y</inf> band, (2) the red shift of the Car Stark signal and (3) the increasing |δμ| of the Car band. Based on the results and the crystal structure, a combined effect of exciton-charge transfer (CT) states mixing, and inhomogeneous narrowing of the BChl a site energy is proposed to be the origin of the 915 nm absorption. CT-exciton state mixing has long been found to be the origin of strong Stark signal in LH1 and special pair, and the more extent of the mixing in Tch. tepidum LH1 is mainly the consequence of the shorter BChl-BChl distances. The less flexible protein structure results in a smaller site energy disorder (inhomogeneous narrowing), which was demonstrated to be able to influence |δμ| and absorption.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1479-1486
JournalBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics
Volume1847
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

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