Cristin result ID: 410705
Last modified: October 21, 2013, 12:12 PM
Result
Academic article
2000

Nanosecond Laser Photolysis Studies of Chlorosomes and Artificial Aggregates Containing Bacteriochlorophyll e: Evidence for the Proximity of Carotenoids and Bacteriochlorophyll a in Chlorosomes from Chlorobium phaeobacteroides strain CL1401

Contributors:
  • J. B. Arellano
  • Thor Bernt Melø
  • C. M. Borrego
  • J. Garcia-Gil and
  • K. Razi Naqvi

Journal

Photochemistry and Photobiology
ISSN 0031-8655
e-ISSN 1751-1097
NVI-level 1

About the result

Academic article
Year of publication: 2000
Volume: 72
Issue: 5
Pages: 669 - 675

Import sources

Bibsys ID: r00023164

Description Description

Title

Nanosecond Laser Photolysis Studies of Chlorosomes and Artificial Aggregates Containing Bacteriochlorophyll e: Evidence for the Proximity of Carotenoids and Bacteriochlorophyll a in Chlorosomes from Chlorobium phaeobacteroides strain CL1401

Summary

Time-resolved, laser-induced changes in absorbance, DeltaA(lambda,t), have been recorded with a view to probing pigment-pigment interactions in chlorosomes (control as well as carotenoid-depleted) and artificial aggregates of bacteriochlorophyll e (BChle). Control chlorosomes were isolated from Chlorobium phaeobacteroides strain CL1401, whose chromophores comprise BChle, bacteriochlorophyll a (BChla) and several carotenoid (Car) pigments; Car-depleted chlorosomes, from cells grown in cultures containing 2-hydroxybiphenyl. Artificial aggregates were prepared by dispersing BChle in aqueous phase in the presence of monogalactosyl diglyceride. In chlorosomes DeltaA shows, besides a signal attributable to triplet Car (with a half-life of about 4 microseconds), signals in the Qy regions of both BChl. The BChla signal decays at the same rate as the Car signal, which is explained by postulating that some Car are in intimate contact with some baseplate BChla pigments, and that when a ground-state Car changes into a triplet Car, the absorption spectrum of its BChla neighbors undergoes a concomitant change (termed transient environment-induced perturbation). The signal in the Qy-region of BChle behaves differently: its amplitude falls, under reducing conditions, by more than a factor of two during the first 0.5 microseconds (a period during which the Car signal suffers negligible diminution), and is much smaller under nonreducing conditions. The BChle signal is also attributed to transient environment-induced perturbation, but in this case the perturber is a BChle photoproduct (probably a triplet or a radical ion). The absence of long-lived BChle triplets in all three systems, and of long-lived BChla triplets in chlorosomes, indicates that BChle in densely packed assemblies is less vulnerable to photodamage than monomeric BChle and that, in chlorosome, BChla

Contributors

J. B. Arellano

  • Affiliation:
    Author

Thor Bernt Melø

  • Affiliation:
    Author
    at Department of Physics at Norwegian University of Science and Technology

C. M. Borrego

  • Affiliation:
    Author

J. Garcia-Gil

  • Affiliation:
    Author

K. Razi Naqvi

  • Affiliation:
    Author
    at Department of Physics at Norwegian University of Science and Technology
1 - 5 of 5