Abstract

Excitation energy transfer (EET) in light-harvesting antennae is a highly efficient key event in photosynthesis, where light-induced dynamics of the antenna pigment-protein complexes may play a functional role. So far, however, the relationship between EET and protein dynamics remains unknown. C-phycocyanin (C-PC) is the main pigment/protein complex present in the cyanobacterial antenna, called "phycobilisome". The aim of the present study was to investigate light-induced C-PC internal thermal motions (ps timescale) measured by inelastic neutron scattering. To synchronize the beginning of the laser flash (6 ns duration) with that of the neutron test pulse ( approximately 87 micros duration), we developed a novel type of "time-resolved" experimental setup on MIBEMOL time-of-flight neutron spectrometer (LLB, France). Data acquisition has been modified to get quasi-simultaneously "light" and "dark" measurements (with and without laser, respectively) and eliminate many spurious effects that could occur on the sample during the experiment. The study was carried out on concentrated C-PC ( approximately 135 g/L protein in D(2)O phosphate buffer), contained in an aluminium/sapphire sample holder (almost "transparent" for neutrons) and homogeneously illuminated inside an "integrating sphere". We observed very similar incoherent dynamical structure factors of C-PC with or without light. The vibrational density of states showed two very slightly increased vibrational modes with light, at approximately 30 and approximately 50 meV ( approximately 240 and approximately 400 cm(-1), respectively). These effects have to be verified by further experiments before probing any temporal evolution, by introducing a time delay between the laser flash and the neutron test pulse.

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