Abstract

The present study describes the fluorescence emission properties of recombinant water-soluble chlorophyll (Chl) protein (WSCP) complexes reconstituted with either Chl a or Chl b alone (Chl a only or Chl b only WSCP, respectively) or mixtures of both pigments at different stoichiometrical ratios. Detailed investigations were performed with time and space correlated ps fluorescence spectroscopy within the temperature range from 10 to 295 K. The following points were found: (a) The emission spectra at room temperature (295 K) are well characterized by bands with a dominating Lorentzian profile broadened due to phonon scattering and peak positions located at 677, 684 and 693 nm in the case of Chl a only WSCP and at 665, 675 and 689 nm for Chl b only WSCP. In addition, all spectra contain minor bands in the longer wavelength region. (b) The emission spectra at 10 K of samples suspended in buffer containing 50% glycerol are dominated by bands peaking at 668 nm for Chl b only WSCP and at 685 nm for Chl a only WSCP and samples reconstituted with mixtures of Chl a and Chl b. (c) At 10 K and in buffer with 50% glycerol the decay kinetics of WSCP samples with Chl a only are dominated by a component with a time constant of 6.2 (+/-0.2) ns at 685 nm while those of WSCP containing mixtures of Chl a and Chl b are characterized by a slightly shorter value of 6.0 (+/-0.2) ns. WSCP containing Chl b only exhibits a distinctly longer value of 7.0 (+/-0.3) ns at an emission wavelength of 668 nm. (d) The decay associated emission spectra at 10 K of all samples exhibit at least 3 decay components with time constants of 80-120 ps, 2-4 ns and 6-7 ns in 50% glycerol. These results are consistently described within the framework of our previously presented model (J. Phys. Chem. B 2007, 111, No. 46, 13325; J. Phys. Chem. B 2007, 111, No. 35, 10487) , for the structural motifs of chlorophyll binding to the tetrameric protein matrix of WSCP. It is shown that formation of strongly coupled open sandwich dimers does not lead to quenching of 1Chl a* or 1Chl b*.

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