Single-Molecule Identification of Quenched and Unquenched
States of LHCII
Posted on 2015-12-17 - 07:32
In photosynthetic light harvesting,
absorbed sunlight is converted
to electron flow with near-unity quantum efficiency under low light
conditions. Under high light conditions, plants avoid damage to their
molecular machinery by activating a set of photoprotective mechanisms
to harmlessly dissipate excess energy as heat. To investigate these
mechanisms, we study the primary antenna complex in green plants,
light-harvesting complex II (LHCII), at the single-complex level.
We use a single-molecule technique, the Anti-Brownian Electrokinetic
trap, which enables simultaneous measurements of fluorescence intensity,
lifetime, and spectra in solution. With this approach, including the
first measurements of fluorescence lifetime on single LHCII complexes,
we access the intrinsic conformational dynamics. In addition to an
unquenched state, we identify two partially quenched states of LHCII.
Our results suggest that there are at least two distinct quenching
sites with different molecular compositions, meaning multiple dissipative
pathways in LHCII. Furthermore, one of the quenched conformations
significantly increases in relative population under environmental
conditions mimicking high light.
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Schlau-Cohen, Gabriela S.; Yang, Hsiang-Yu; P. J. Krüger, Tjaart; Xu, Pengqi; Gwizdala, Michal; Grondelle, Rienk van; et al. (2015). Single-Molecule Identification of Quenched and Unquenched
States of LHCII. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.5b00034