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1.
Dynamic properties of the picosecond fluorescence of highly enriched reaction-center particles of photosystem I (8 - 10 chlorophylls/P700) prepared from spinach have been investigated. The number (N) of photons used to excite chlorophyll molecules per reaction center was controlled between 0.06 and 80. The 1/e lifetime was ca. 25 ps for N 1. which is much shorter than previously measured lifetimes of photosystem I particles. The initial fluorescence intensity saturated at higher excitation intensities (N ≲ 1). This was interpreted in terms of interaction and annihilation among excited chlorophyll molecules which occur almost entirely within the duration of a laser flash. The spectrum-resolved fluorescence decay was faster at 690 than at 680 nm. This implies that two kinds of antenna chlorophylls, apart from and in close proximity to P700, have different lifetimes. Upon heat treatment a component with a much longer fluorescence decay time was observed. The growth of this component upon heat treatment at increasing temperatures showed a correlation with a decrease in the amount of P700 that could be photooxidized.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract— The fluorescence decay kinetics of photosynthetic mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardii which lack photosystem II (PS II), photosystem I (PS I), and both PS II and PS I have been measured. The PS II mutant strain8–36C exhibits fluorescence decay lifetime components of 53, 424 and 2197 ps. The fluorescence decay of a PS I mutant strain12–7 contains two major fluorescence decay components with lifetimes of 152 and 424 ps. The fluorescence decay of mutant strain C2, which lacks both PS II and PS I, is nearly single exponential with a lifetime of 2561 ± 222 ps. In simulations in which it is assumed that wild-type decays are a simple sum of the major decay components of the isolated parts of the photosynthetic unit as measured in the mutants, curves are obtained that fit the wild-type C. reinhardii fluorescence decay data when the absorption cross-sections of PS II and PS I are weighted approximately equally. The 89 ps lifetime component in the wild-type is an average of 53 and 152 ps components arising from excitation transfer to and trapping in PS I and PS II. The single step transfer time in PS I is estimated to be between 100 and 700 fs depending on assumptions about array size. We find that between two and four visits to the PS I reaction center are required before final trapping.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract— Delayed fluorescence from chromatophores of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis was measured at temperatures below 0°C. A component with a decay half-time of about 7 ms was found. Its intensity was directly proportional to the number of reaction centers in the P985+·A- state. During prolonged illumination it faded as electrons moved forward along the electron transport chain from the primary acceptor, A, (P985+·A-→P985+·A), and its decay in the dark paralleled the disappearence of the P985+ electron paramagnetic resonance absorption. The data suggest that this component of delayed fluorescence results from a direct reversal of the primary light reaction. While the rate of the P985+middot;A-→P985·A reaction was almost independent of temperature, delayed fluorescence intensity displayed an apparent activation energy of 0°2 eV. It is concluded that the P985+·A-→P985·A reaction proceeds by parallel radiative and nonradiative routes. The direct proportionality between delayed fluorescence and the concentration of P985+·A- pairs seems to preclude an involvement of triplet-triplet annihilation or dependence of delayed fluorescence upon the variable prompt fluorescence yield.  相似文献   

4.
The fluorescence kinetics of photosystem I core particles from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been measured with picosecond resolution in order to test a previous hypothesis suggesting a charge recombination mechanism for the early electron-transfer steps and the fluorescence kinetics (Müller et al. Biophys. J. 2003, 85, 3899-3922). Performing global target analyses for various kinetic models on the original fluorescence data confirms the "charge recombination" model as the only acceptable one of the models tested while all of the other models can be excluded. The analysis allowed a precise determination of (i) the effective charge separation rate constant from the equilibrated reaction center excited state (438 ns(-1)) confirming our previous assignment based on transient absorption data (Müller et al. Biophys. J. 2003, 85, 3899-3922), (ii) the effective charge recombination rate constant back to the excited state (52 ns(-1)), and (iii) the intrinsic secondary electron-transfer rate constant (80 ns(-1)). The average energy equilibration lifetime core antenna/RC is about 1 ps in the "charge recombination" model, in agreement with previous transient absorption data, vs the 18-20 ps energy transfer lifetime from antenna to RC within "transfer-to-the-trap-limited" models. The apparent charge separation lifetime in the recombination model is about three times faster than in the "transfer-to-the-trap-limited" model. We conclude that the charge separation kinetics is trap-limited in PS I cores devoid of red antenna states such as in C. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

5.
The recombination dynamics of zinc-blende-type, deep-red emitting CdTe/CdS core-shell nanocrystals is studied over a wide temperature range. Two characteristic decay regimes are found: a temperature-dependent decay component of a few nanoseconds and a long-living temperature-independent component of approximately 315 ns. The average decay time of the exciton states changes from 20 to 5ns when the temperature is increased from 15 to 295 K. At low temperatures, the observed decay behavior is assigned to thermally induced population and decay of the allowed exchange-split exciton states. At temperatures above T>100 K, nonradiative decay channels involving phonons start to contribute to the exciton recombination. The observed broad distribution in decay times, monitored by stretched exponential fitting functions, we explain by variations in the electron-hole overlap caused by a partly incomplete CdTe/CdS core-shell structure and the nearly energy-degenerated bright and dark state superposition.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously reported the enthalpy and volume changes of charge separation in photosystem I from Synechocystis 6803 using pulsed photoacoustics on the microsecond time scale, assigned to the electron-transfer reaction from excited-state P(700) to F(A/B) iron sulfur clusters. In the present work, we focus on the thermodynamics of two steps in photosystem I: (1) P(700) --> A(1)(-)F(X) (<10 ns) and (2) A(1)(-)F(X) --> F(A/B)(-) (20-200 ns). The fit by convolution of photoacoustic waves on the nanosecond and microsecond time scales resolved two kinetic components: (1) a prompt component (<10 ns) with large negative enthalpy (-0.8 +/- 0.1 eV) and large volume change (-23 +/- 2 A(3)), which are assigned to the P(700) --> A(1)(-)F(X) step, and (2) a component with approximately 200 ns lifetime, which has a positive enthalpy (+0.4 +/- 0.2 eV) and a small volume change (-3 +/- 2 A(3)) that are attributed to the A(1)(-)F(X) --> F(A/B)(-) step. For the fast reaction using the redox potentials of A(1)F(X) (-0.67 V) and P(700) (+0.45 V) and the energy of P(700) (1.77 eV), the free energy change for the P(700) --> A(1)(-)F(X) step is -0.63 eV, and thus the entropy change (TDeltaS, T = 25 degrees C) is -0.2 +/- 0.3 eV. For the slow reaction, A(1)(-)F(X) --> F(A/B)(-), taking the free energy of -0.14 eV [Santabara, S.; Heathcote, P; Evans, C. W. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 2005, 1708, 283-310], the entropy change (TDeltaS) is positive, +0.54 +/- 0.3 eV. The positive entropy contribution is larger than the positive enthalpy, which indicates that the A(-)F(X) to F(A/B)(-) step in photosystem I is entropy driven. Other possible contributions to the measured values are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The electron-transfer process of a first generation dendrimer with a triphenylamine core substituted with one peryleneimide chromophore at the rim (N1P1) was investigated by steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopic techniques in two different solvents of medium and low polarity. Single photon counting experiments showed a fast charge separation and a thermally activated back reaction, which is uncommon for a polyaryl bridge or long-distance through-space electron transfer. The four exponential fluorescence decay can be traced to the presence of two subsets of molecules, which are constitutional isomers of N1P1. Although formally N1P1 resembles a donor-bridge-acceptor compound, detailed analysis of the data shows that the electron transfer occurs by a through-space mechanism. This amine core dendrimer has peculiar and unique characteristics resulting in the observation of efficient back transfer and delayed peryleneimide fluorescence in diethyl ether at 293 K and very long-lived charge recombination luminescence at 77 K.  相似文献   

8.
Fluorescence lifetimes of isolated membranes of Rhodopseudomonas viridis were measured in the temperature range of 77 K to 25 K. At room temperature, the main component of the fluorescence decay of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) b had a time constant of 50 ps. In contrast to other purple bacteria, the emission at low temperature was spectrally homogeneous and showed essentially single lifetimes of 140 ps at 77 K and 180 ps at 25 K, with the primary electron donor in the oxidized state. Taking into account the relative fluorescence yields with open and closed reaction centers, we arrive at numbers of 125 ps and 215 ps, respectively, for open reaction centers. These numbers are significantly smaller than expected on the basis of measurements of the efficiency of charge separation, perhaps suggesting that the excitation decay in the absence of reaction centers is considerably faster at low temperature than at room temperature. At least four different spectral components with different lifetimes were observed at 25 K in the emission of Heliobacterium chlorum, a short-wavelength component of about 30 ps and three longer-wavelength components of about 100 ps, 300 ps, and 900 ps. This indicates a strong heterogeneity in the emitting pigment, BChl g-808. The component with the shortest lifetime does not appear to be affected by the redox state of the reaction center and might reflect energy transfer to BChl g species which are connected to the reaction center.  相似文献   

9.
The photosystem I (PSI) pigment-protein complex of plants converts light energy into a transmembrane charge separation, which ultimately leads to the reduction of carbon dioxide. Recent studies on the dynamics of primary energy transfer, charge separation, and following electron transfer of the reaction center (RC) of the PSI prepared from spinach are reviewed. The main results of femtosecond transient absorption and fluorescence spectroscopies as applied to the P700-enchied PSI RC are summarized. This specially prepared material contains only 12–14 chlorophylls per P700, which is a special pair of chlorophyll a and has a significant role in primary charge separation. The P700-enriched particles are useful to study dynamics of cofactors, since about 100 light-harvesting chlorophylls are associated with wild PSI RC and prevent one from observing the elementary steps of the charge separation. In PSI RC energy and electron transfer were found to be strongly coupled and an ultrafast up-hill energy equilibration and charge separation were observed upon preferential excitation of P700. The secondary electron-transfer dynamics from the reduced primary electron acceptor chlorophyll a to quinone are described. With creating free energy differences (ΔG0) for the reaction by reconstituting various artificial quinones and quinoids, the rate of electron transfer was measured. Analysis of rates versus ΔG0 according to the quantum theory of electron transfer gave the reorganization energy, electronic coupling energy and other factors. It was shown that the natural quinones are optimized in the photosynthetic protein complexes. The above results were compared with those of photosynthetic purple bacteria, of which the structure and functions have been studied most.  相似文献   

10.
The algorithm for simulation of the OJDIP fluorescence induction curve in chloroplasts under variable conditions is presented. It is derived from analyzes of chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics upon excitation with single- (STF), twin- (TTF) and repetitive STF excitations, and from the rate equations that describe the sequence of transfer steps associated with the reduction of the primary quinone acceptor QA and the release of photochemical fluorescence quenching of photosystem II (PSII) in multi-turnover excitation (MTF). The fluorescence induction algorithm (FIA) considers a photochemical O–J–D, a photo-electrochemical J–I and an I–P component (phase) which probably is associated with a photo-electric interaction between PSI and PSII. The photochemical phase incorporates the kinetics associated with the double reduction of the acceptor pair [PheQA] in QB–nonreducing reaction centers (RCs) and the associated doubling of the variable fluorescence, in agreement with the three-state trapping model (TSTM) of PSII. Application of and results with the algorithm are illustrated for MTF-induced OJDIP curves, measured in dark-adapted, in STF pre-excited and in DCMU inhibited thylakoids.  相似文献   

11.
We have used chlorophyll fluorescence, delayed luminescence and thermoluminescence measurements to study the influence of an artificial DeltapH in the presence or absence of zeaxanthin on photosystem II reactions. Energization of the pea thylakoid membranes induced non-photochemical fluorescence quenching and an increase in the overall luminescence emission of PSII during delayed luminescence and thermoluminescence measurements. This DeltapH-induced overall luminescence increase was caused by a strongly enhanced delayed luminescence in the seconds range before sample heating. In the subsequent thermoluminescence measurements the intensity of the B-band decreased after one and increased after two or more single turnover flashes. We propose that strong membrane energization shifted the redox potential of photosystem II radical pairs to more negative values causing the high delayed luminescence. The zeaxanthin-dependent non-photochemical fluorescence quenching component, however, did not alter thermoluminescence B-bands but decreased the delayed luminescence intensity by 30%. To our knowledge this is the first report that the radiative radical pair recombination, exhibited as delayed luminescence but not thermoluminescence emission, is sensitive to the antenna located zeaxanthin related non-photochemical fluorescence quenching. Our data can be interpreted within the frame of the exciton/radical pair equilibrium model that describes photosystem II as a shallow trap and incorporates the transfer of energy from the re-excitated reaction centre to the antenna of photosystem II.  相似文献   

12.
Transient absorption difference spectroscopy was used to study the temperature dependence of the P798+ decay kinetics in heliobacteria. For membrane samples, two components were obtained from the fitting of kinetic traces in the temperature range of 4-29 degrees C. A 3-9 ms component representing the cytochrome (cyt) c oxidation has an activation energy of 33.0 +/- 2.8 kJ/mol. A 12-22 ms component representing either P798+FX- or P798+FA/B- recombination has an activation energy of 15.3 +/- 2.4 kJ/mol. In isolated reaction centers (RC), only one 14 ms component due to P798+FX- recombination was obtained in this temperature range. The Arrhenius plot shows that the recombination rate of this P798+FX- state is temperature independent in the near room temperature range. For RC in the temperature range of 60-298 K, a 12-15 ms decay was obtained at temperatures greater than 240 K. Biphasic decay traces (12-15 ms and 2-4 ms components) were obtained at temperatures between 170 K and 230 K. Only one 2-4 ms component was found at temperatures lower than 160 K. The gradual switchover from the 12-15 ms to the 2-4 ms component upon cooling may indicate the shift of the P798+FX- recombination state to a state that is prior to P798+FX-, although other interpretations can not be excluded. The absorption difference spectrum (delta A @ 160 K - delta A @ 240 K) in the blue region shows a positive amplitude below 405 nm and a negative amplitude above 405 nm implying that the 2-4 ms decay component may be due to the recombination of P798+A1-, where A1 is a quinone-type acceptor.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract— Time resolved fluorescence measurements, carried out on protochlorophyllide reductase enriched membranes from oat ( Avena sativa ), are described. A fast (1 ns at 293 K) decaying fluorescence component is assigned to the photoactive NADPH-protochlorophyllide-enzyme complex, while a slower (5 ns) component is ascribed to non-photoactive protochlorophyllide. The results are interpreted in terms of a new fast primary step in the light requiring step of chlorophyll synthesis. The temperature dependence of the rate of this reaction has been studied by measuring the decay time of the fast fluorescence component at various temperatures from 77 to 293 K. Complete spectra of the kinetic fluorescence components have been measured at 293, 160 and 77 K.  相似文献   

14.
Single-photon timing measurements on flowing samples of Chlorella vulgaris and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii at low excitation intensities at room temperature indicate two main kinetic components of the fluorescence at open reaction centers (F0) of photosystem II with lifetimes of approx. 130 and 500 ps and relative yields of about 30 and 70%. Closing the reaction centers progressively by preincubation of the algae with increasing concentrations of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-l,l-dimethylurea (DCMU) and hydroxylamine gave rise to a slow component with a lifetime increasing from 1.4 to 2.2 ns (Fmax) The yield of the slow component increased to 65-68% of the total fluorescence yield in parallel to a decrease in the yield of the fast component to a value close to zero at the fmax-level. The 130 ps lifetime of the fast component remained unchanged. The middle component showed an increase of its lifetime from 500 to 1100 ps and of its yield by a factor of 1.5. Spacing of the ps laser pulses by 12 μs allowed us to resolve a new long-lived fluorescence component of very small amplitude which is ascribed to a small amount of chlorophyll not connected to functional antennae. The opposite dependence of the yield of the fast and the slow component on the state of the reaction centers at almost constant lifetimes is consistent with a mechanism of energy conversion in largely separately functioning photosystem II units. Yields and lifetimes of these two components are in agreement with the high quantum yield of photosynthesis. The lower lifetime limit of 1.4 ns of the slow component is assigned to the average transfer time of an excited state from a closed to a neighboring open reaction center and the increase in the lifetime to 2.2 ns is evidence for a limited energy transfer between photosystems II. Relative effects of changing the excitation wavelength from 630 to 652 nm on the relative fluorescence yields of the kinetic components were studied at the fluorescence wavelengths 682, 703 and 730 nm. Our data indicate that (i) the middle component has its fluorescence maximum at shorter wavelength than the fast component and (ii) that the antennae chlorophylls giving rise to the middle component are preferentially excited by 652 nm light. It is concluded that the middle component originates from the light-harvesting chlorophyll alb protein complexes and the major portion of the fast component from the chlorophyll a antennae of open photosystem II reaction centers.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract. The delayed light emission decay rate (up to 120 μs) and the rise in chlorophyll a fluorescence yield (from 3 to 35 μs) in isolated chloroplasts from several species, following a saturating 10 ns flash, are temperature independent in the 0–35°C range. However, delayed light in the 120–340 μs range is temperature dependent. Arrhenius plots of the exponential decay constants are: (a) linear for lettuce and pea chloroplasts but discontinuous for bush bean (12–17°C) and spinach (12–20°C) chloroplasts; (b) unaffected by 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (inhibitor of electron flow), gramicidin D (which eliminates light-induced membrane potential) and glutaraldehyde fixation (which stops gross structural changes).
The discontinuities, noted above for bush bean and spinach chloroplasts, are correlated with abrupt changes in (a) the thylakoid membrane lipid fluidity (monitored by EPR spectra of 12 nixtroxide stearate, 12NS) and (b) the fluidity of extracted lipids (monitored by differential calorimetry and EPR spectra of 12 NS). However, no such discontinuity was observed in (a) chlorophyll a fluorescence intensity of thylakoids and (b) fluorescence of tryptophan residues of delipidated chloroplasts.
Microsecond delayed light is linearly dependent on light intensity at flash intensities as low as one quantum per 2 times 104 chlorophyll molecules. We suggest that this delayed light could originate from a one quantum process in agreement with the hypothesis that recombination of primary charges leads to this light emission. A working hypothesis for the energy levels of Photosystem II components is proposed involving a charge stabilization step on the primary acceptor side, which is in a lipid environment.
Finally, the redox potential of P680 (the reaction center for chlorophyll of system II) is calculated to be close to 1.0–1.3 V.  相似文献   

16.
Decay-associated emission spectra of synchronized cultures of Scenedesmusobliquus have been studied at two stages of their life cycle corresponding to the maximum and minimum of photosynthetic capacity. These decay-associated spectra comprise three kinetic components. The two components which are assigned to photosystem II show variations in their relative amplitudes depending on the life cycle of the cells. From the correlations observed in the decay-associated fluorescence spectra on the one hand and the fluorescence induction parameters on the other hand we obtained further evidence that the two photosystem II fluorescence components are directly related to the two fluorescence induction phases. This correlation supports our previous assignment of the two photosystem II fluorescence decay components of about 0.3 ns and about 0.6 ns lifetimes at the F0 level (open photosystem II reaction centres to photosystem II α units and photosystem II β units respectively. The most pronounced difference between cells at the 8th hour of the life cycle and those at the 16th hour consists in the size of the photosystem II β units which are about 30% larger for the latter. In agreement with previous studies it was found that at these two stages the photosystem I units do not differ in size.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Abstract— The use of an inexpensive pulsed laser diode (Hamamatsu picosecond light pulser PLP-01) as the excitation source for a single photon timing spectrolluorimeter with microchannel plate photomultiplier detection was dem-onstrated. The performance of the instrument was tested with two very short-lived fluorescent dyes and two pho-tosynthetic systems with wcll-defined decay characteristics. Individual fluorescence decays were analyzed by modeling with a convolution of the instrument response function to a sum of exponential decay components. Accurate fluorcscence lifetimcs of the dyes cryptocyanine (55 ps in acetone and 83 ps in ethanol) and 1,1'-diethyl-2,2'-dicarbocyanine iodide (13 ps in acetone and 26 ps in ethanol) were obtained by analysis of the decay kinetics with a single exponential component. Fits to the fluorescence decay kinetics of isolated photosystem I particles and intact cyanobacterial cells required three and four decay components. respectively. The decay kinetics of the isolated photosystem I preparation were dominated (99%) by a very fast 9 ps lifetime, reflecting the preparation's small antenna size of approximately 30 chlorophyll a . The cyanobackria showed decay components of 35 ps, 160 ps, 400 ps and 1.95 ns similar to those described previously by Mullincaux and Holzwarth ( Rinchim. Biophys. Acfa 1098 , 68–78, 1991). The performance of the pulsed laser diode as an excitation source for single photon timing is discussed in comparison with conventional sources of picosecond light pulses.  相似文献   

19.
The thermoluminescence afterglow (AG) measured in plant leaves originates from the S(2)/S(3)Q(B)(-) charge pair recombination in photosystem II (PSII) initiated by reverse electron flow from stromal reductants to PQ and then to the Q(B) site in PSII centers that are in the S(2)/S(3)Q(B) state. In this study, we show that this luminescence, absent in isolated thylakoid membranes, can be measured in intact chloroplasts that retain their stromal content including the electron acceptor pool (oxidized ferredoxin/NADP(+)) of photosystem I. The properties of the chloroplasts AG emission is similar to the AG in leaves in terms of temperature maximum, period-four modulation, far-red light stimulation, and antimycin A inhibition.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract— An undissociated photosystem I complex may be isolated from spinach thylakoids by mild gel electrophoresis (CP1a) or Triton X-100. CP1a has a Chl a / b ratio of 11 and a Chl/P700 ratio of 120. while the Triton X-100 PS I complex (Chl a / b ratio of 5.9) has a larger antenna unit size (Chl/P700 ratio of 180). None of the Chl a / b -proteins of the main light-harvesting complex (apoproteins of 30–27 kD) are present in CP1a, and they account for less than 10% of the total chlorophyll in the Triton X-100 PS I complex. Instead, these PS I complexes have specific, but as yet little characterized, Chi a / b -proteins (apoproteins in the 26–21 kD range). With both PS I complexes, Chi b transfers light excitation to the 735 nm low temperature fluorescence band characteristic of photosystem I. We suggest that Chi b is an integral but minor component of photosystem I.  相似文献   

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