Abstract

Cyanobacterial phycobilisome complexes absorb visible sunlight and funnel photogenerated excitons to the photosystems where charge separation occurs. In the phycobilisome complex of Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942, phycocyanin protein rods that absorb bluer wavelengths are assembled on allophycocyanin cores that absorb redder wavelengths. This arrangement creates a natural energy gradient toward the reaction centers of the photosystems. Here, we employ broadband pump–probe spectroscopy to observe the fate of excess excitations in the phycobilisome complex of this organism. We show that excess excitons are quenched through exciton–exciton annihilation along the phycocyanin rods prior to transfer to the allophycocyanin cores. Our observations are especially relevant in comparison to other antenna proteins, where exciton annihilation primarily occurs in the lowest-energy chlorophylls. The observed effect could play a limited photoprotective role in physiological light fluences. The exciton decay dynamics is faster in the intact phycobilisome than in isolated C-phycocyanin trimers studied in earlier work, confirming that this effect is an emergent property of the complex assembly. Using the obtained annihilation data, we calculate exciton hopping times of 2.2–6.4 ps in the phycocyanin rods. This value agrees with earlier FRET calculations of exciton hopping times along phycocyanin hexamers by Sauer and Scheer.

Highlights

  • Cyanobacteria carry out nitrogen fixation, methanogenesis, and oxygenic photosynthesis in the biosphere.[1]

  • We find that excess excitations created in the phycocyanin rods of the complex are annihilated before they transfer to the allophycocyanin core

  • Phycobilisome complexes are isolated from wild-type S. elongatus PCC 7942

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Summary

■ INTRODUCTION

Cyanobacteria carry out nitrogen fixation, methanogenesis, and oxygenic photosynthesis in the biosphere.[1]. To uncover exciton quenching time scales in the PBS of S. elongatus PCC 7942 and pinpoint the sites of excess exciton quenching, we perform fluence-dependent ultrafast broadband pump−probe spectroscopy on this protein complex. This method has been used in the past to observe FRET frustration in Cy5 dyes on DNA31 and exciton−exciton annihilation in monolayer MoS232 and to decode exciton equilibration time scales in LHCII33 trimers and LH2 membranes.[34] We employ pump fluences corresponding to 1.3, 3.5, 6.1, and 13.6 excitations per phycocyanin rod of the phycobilisome. The pump energies are attenuated to 14, 35, 61, and 146 nJ per pulse using neutral density filters for the annihilation measurements, and the probe intensity is attenuated by 2 orders of magnitude

■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
■ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
■ REFERENCES
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