Tytuł pozycji:
Tuning the photophysical features of self-assembling photoactive polypeptides for light-harvesting
The LH1 complex is the major light-harvesting antenna of purple
photosynthetic bacteria. Its role is to capture photons, and then store
them and transfer the excitation energy to the photosynthetic reaction
center. The structure of LH1 is modular and it cooperatively
self-assembles from the subunits composed of short transmembrane
polypeptides that reversibly bind the photoactive cofactors:
bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoid. LH1 assembly, the intra-complex
interactions and the light-harvesting features of LH1 can be controlled
in micellar media by varying the surfactant concentration and by adding
carotenoid and/or a co-solvent. By exploiting this approach, we can
manipulate the size of the assembly, the intensity of light absorption,
and the energy and lifetime of its first excited singlet state. For
instance, via the introduction of Ni-substituted bacteriochlorophyll
into LH1, the lifetime of this electronic state of the antenna can be
shortened by almost three orders of magnitude. On the other hand, via
the exchange of carotenoid, light absorption in the visible range can be
tuned. These results show how in a relatively simple self-assembling
pigment-polypeptide system a sophisticated functional tuning can be
achieved and thus they provide guidelines for the construction of
bio-inspired photoactive nanodevices.