Title: Femtosecond energy transfer in LHCII of green plants
1In vivo regulation of photocurrents
Herbert van Amerongen
Herbert van Amerongen Laboratory of
Biophysics Wageningen
2Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplasts of
green plants
3The complexes of the thylakoid membrane
4Absorption properties of the photosynthetic
pigments
S2
Qy
5Absorption
Vibronic excited states
Electronic excited state
Absorption 6 fs
Electronic ground state
6Decay of the excited state
Vibronic excited states
Electronic excited state
Internal conversion to the lowest excited
state ( 100 fs) Energy lost as heat
Electronic ground state
7Decay of the excited state
Vibronic excited states
Electronic excited state
Internal conversion to the electronic ground
state (IC) Energy lost as heat
Electronic ground state
kIC 0.02 ns-1 tIC 50 ns
8Decay of the excited state
Vibronic excited states
Electronic excited state
Decay by emission of a photon Energy lost as
fluorescence
Electronic ground state
kF 0.06 ns-1 tF 17 ns
9Decay of the excited state
Electronic excited state
Decay to the triplet state (T) (Intersystem
crossing)
1 ms
Electronic ground state
kT 0.125 ns-1 tIT 8 ns
10Lifetime of the excited state
t (k)-1 (kF kIC kT)-1
11Decay of the excited state 2e
Vibronic excited states
Electronic excited state
Electron transfer to nearby molecule
Electronic ground state
Molecule 1
Molecule 2
12carotenoids in plant photosynthesis
13Carotenoid Absorption Spectra
S2 ? S0
14(No Transcript)
15Femtoseconde pump-probe
16Femtoseconde pump-probe
17Femtoseconde pump-probe
18Femtoseconde pump-probe
19LHCII energy transfer from carotenoids to Chl
20(No Transcript)
21- Energy transfer from Chl b and Car to Chl a is
ultrafast - Car and Chl need physical contact for energy
transfer - Almost all the excitations are localized on Chl a
- Energy transfer to the reaction center occurs via
Chls a
22Photosystems I and II are separated in the
thylakoid membrane
PSII and LHCII.
PSI.
23Photosystems I and II can be studied separately
PSII and LHCII.
PSI.
We used BBY particles, no PSI present
24Photosystem 2 (PSII)
PS2-LHC2 supercomplex
25Picosecond fluorescence reveals excited-state
dynamics in PSII membranes
Excitation at 420 nm and 483 nm lead to different
extent of excitation of the outer antenna 68
and 86
Dt
26Charge separation in PSII in the membrane
35 ps
5.3 ps
e-
5.5 ps
-
Antenna
DG 826 cm-1
e-
137 ps
e-
27- Excited-state lifetime of PSII in thylakoid
membrane is around 300 ps
28The destiny of the excited states
lt1
4
2
29Triplet quenching in the antenna complexes LHCII
30Triplet quenching in the antenna
10ms
1ns
31Measure triplets with slow absorption
difference spectroscopy
- Fast detector
- Relatively more probe light than in a fs-ps
experiment,
Ns laserpulse
?OD
Monochromator
Lamp
sample
Photomultiplieror photodiode
32Triplets in LHCII
Peterman et al. 1995 Croce et al. 2007
33525
507
510
490
L2
L1
Neoxanthin quenches singlet oxygen Violaxanthin
is available for xanthophyll cycle
343Chla
3Car
35The other antenna complexes are protected in a
similar way
- CP24, CP26 and CP29 act in the same way as LHCII
(lutein and neoxanthin) - CP47 and CP43 use b-carotene
36Two stages of photosynthesis
H2O
Chloroplast
ATP and NADPH
Water oxydation
The light is absorbed by chlorophylls
O2
Light reactions
Transformation of light energy into chemical
energy (ATP and NADPH)
37If the photosynthetic apparatus gets saturated
somewhere (high light), this leads to blocking of
electron transfer in the RC ? Chl triplet
formation in the RC
38There is no carotenoid in contact with Chl in
the RC
39How to avoid photodamage in the RC?
- The expression of light-harvesting complexes can
be up- and down-regulated (hours)
40State transitions
- Only 15 of the LHC can migrate to PSI. Cyclic
electron transfer around PSI contributes to
proton gradient ATP formation can continue while
PSII receives less photons. - State transitions are much more important in
green algae (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii) gt80 of
the LHC can migrate to PSI. - Phycobilisomes in cyanobacteria also participate
in state transitions,
41Light stress
chloroplast
chloroplast
NPQ
Heat production
Photosynthesis
Heat production
Photosynthesis
42Nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) acts on a
second-minute time scale throw away excess
energy as heat
43NPQ
- Required DpH across thylakoid membrane (result
of extensive charge separation) - PsbS can sense the low pH in the lumen via
protonation (direct quencher or allosteric
regulator) - Low pH in the lumen creates zeaxanthin (Zea) via
the xanthophyll cycle (direct quencher or
allosteric regulator)
44PsbS belongs to lhc family, binds no Chls,
becomes protonated when lumen has low pH
45Xanthophyll cycle leads to Zea formation at low
pH in the lumen
46Is zeaxanthin a direct quencher of excitations?
- Carotenoids with 11 conjugated bonds can quench
Chl excitation via excitation energy transfer,
whereas carotenoids with 9 conjugated bonds
cannot. - R. Berera et al. (2006) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci
USA 103 5343
47THE SYSTEM
A zinc Phthalocyanine covalently attached to a
series of carotenoids with conjugation length of
9,10 and 11.
Absorption in THF
48 THE EXPERIMENT
dyad 1, dyad 2 and dyad 3
Solvents
THF(e07.58), Acetone(e020.6), DMSO(e040.5)
We probe the visible (450-730 nm) and n-IR
regions (850-1000 nm) at different time delays (0
4.8 ns)
We pump the system at 680 nm (Qy
state of Pc)
excitation frequency 1 Khz width 100
fs energy 100 nJ/pulse
Objectives
Can a carotenoid directly quench the singlet
exited state of a Pc-based tetrapyrrole?
How does the process depend on the conjugation
length?
What is the underlying quenching mechanism?
49KINETIC TRACES AT 680 nm IN THF
50 QUENCHING MODEL
Qy
slow
S1
ICT
fast
S0
S0
phtalocyanine
carotenoid
51But zeaxanthin can also quench via electron
transfer
- N.E. Holt et al. (2005) Science 307 433.
52NPQ consists of rapid (seconds) qE (no Zea
required) and slower (minutes) qI (Zea required)
Picture from Peter Horton
53LHCII can switch between 2 states
light-harvesting
Heat producing
54Fluorescence quenching by pressure (4 kbar)
?Vqn 510-6 m3/mol 0.006 ? small
conformational change ?G0qn 7 kJ/mol 3
kT/LHCII
55LHCII aggregation as a model system
56FLIM of LHCII
Raman shows that crystal is similar to quenched
aggregates
LHCII in crystal is quenched as compared to LHCII
in detergent
Pascal et al. 2005, Nature 436, 134-137
57Switching behavior in vivo
Nature (next week) A.V. Ruban et al. (2007)
Nature 450 575.
58Upon aggregation, excitations decay via a Car S1
state (femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy)
A.V. Ruban et al. (2007) Nature 450 575
59Target analysis reveals the spectrum of the
quencher
60proposed molecular model (LHCII)
61Interactions Chl612/Lut620 are also present in
CP24, CP26, CP29 (Croce et al.)
62conclusions
- Luteins 1 and 2 quench triplets in
light-harvesting complexes in PSII - Neoxanthin quenches singlet oxygen
- Violaxanthin is source for zeaxanthin formation
- DpH leads to zeaxanthin formation (NPQ, qI)
- PsbS senses DpH and is needed for NPQ (qE and qI)
- Zeaxanthin can in principle also quench in other
ways - LHCII is responsible for qE via lutein 1 and Chl
612 - CP24, CP26 and CP29 have an identical quenching
cluster and probably also participate in qE
63Other systems
- Diatoms have NPQ like higher plants but stronger
- Cyanobacteria less NPQ (OCP and state
transitions) - Green algae less NPQ, more state-transitions
- Green bacteria Chlorosomes triplet excitons
64Coworkers and collaborators
Wageningen Bart van Oort Koen Broess
Sashka Krumova Arie van Hoek Cor Dijkema
Jan Willem Borst Vilnius Gediminas
Trinkunas Leonas Valkunas Amsterdam Jan
Dekker Rienk van Grondelle Rudi
Berera Groningen Roberta Croce Szeged
Gyozo Garab
Sheffield Peter Horton Marseille Stefano
Caffarri London Jim Barber Alexander
Ruban Tel Aviv Nathan Nelson Verona
Roberto Bassi Saclay/Paris Bruno Robert
Andy Pascal Frankfurt Werner Kuhlbrandt
.A Ground state, B Excited state, C, D E
States reached after charge separation and
charge stabilization