Phycocyanin: one complex, two states, two functions

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Authors

Gwizdala, Michal
Kruger, T.P.J. (Tjaart)
Wahadoszamen, Md.
Gruber, J. Michael
Van Grondelle, Rienk

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Publisher

American Chemical Society

Abstract

Solar energy captured by pigments embedded in light-harvesting complexes can be transferred to neighboring pigments, dissipated, or emitted as fluorescence. Only when it reaches a reaction center is the excitation energy stabilized in the form of a charge separation and converted into chemical energy. Well-directed and regulated energy transfer within the network of pigments is therefore of crucial importance for the success of the photosynthetic processes. Using single-molecule spectroscopy, we show that phycocyanin can dynamically switch between two spectrally distinct states originating from two different conformations. Unexpectedly, one of the two states has a red-shifted emission spectrum. This state is not involved in energy dissipation; instead, we propose that it is involved in direct energy transfer to photosystem I. Finally, our findings suggest that the function of linker proteins in phycobilisomes is to stabilize one state or the other, thus controlling the light-harvesting functions of phycocyanin.

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Keywords

Phycocyanin, Light-harvesting, Synechocystis PCC6803, Energy transfer, Cyanobacterial Phycobilisomes, Molecular architecture, Rod substructures, Photosynthesis, Fluorescence, Supercomplex

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Citation

Gwizdala, M., Kruger, T.P.J., Wahadoszamen, M. et al. 2018, 'Phycocyanin: one complex, two states, two functions', Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, vol. 9, no. 6, pp. 1365–1371.