Abstract

The low-frequency vibrational coherence in the bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)-containing subunit proteins B777 and B820 from the LH1 light-harvesting complex isolated from Rhodospirillum rubrum G9 exhibits rapidly damped modulation components arising from intermolecular, formally nonbonding interactions between the BChl macrocycle and polar groups in the surrounding detergent or protein. The vibrational coherence observed in the monomeric B777 system resembles that observed previously with BChl in acetone because it contains a pair of broad overlapping line shapes with a mean frequency of 191 cm(-1), but the 10:1 intensity ratio of the librational and translational components is distinctive of the motions of the polar head groups in the nonionic detergent micelle that solvates the BChl macrocycle. In contrast, the vibrational coherence observed with the dimeric B820 complex is almost 20 times weaker in intensity and exhibits narrower line shapes and lower average frequencies than observed in B777. The structure of the B820 complex sterically protects the pair of BChl macrocycles from the surrounding solvent, so modulation components assigned to intrinsic interactions between the BChl and the protein and between the pair of BChl's are revealed. A relatively well-ordered interaction between the BChl macrocycle and a tryptophan residue in each alpha-helical polypeptide accounts for a 28 cm(-1) component with a narrow line shape, but most of the intensity arises from a broader 46 cm(-1) component that is assigned to the interaction between the paired BChl macrocycles. The breadth of the line shape for this component is a measure of the disorder in the ensemble of B820 subunits. The results support the hypothesis that the excited-state vibrational dynamics and the optical and/or Marcus charge-transfer reorganization energies of BChl in photosynthetic light-harvesting proteins and reaction centers are strongly controlled by van der Waals modes with neighboring molecules, with dominant contributions to the intermolecular potential arising from the London dispersion and dipole-dipole interactions.

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