Abstract

Excitation spectra were measured at 4 K of bacteriochlorophyll a fluorescence in reaction center containing pigment-protein complexes obtained from the green photosynthetic bacterium Prosthecochloris aestuarii. Excitation spectra for the longest-wave emission (838 nm) showed bands of bacteriochlorophyll a, carotenoid, and of a pigment with absorption bands at 670, 438 and possibly near 420 nm, which is probably identical to an unidentified porphyrin described in the preceding paper (Swarthoff, T., Kramer, H.J.M. and Amesz, J. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 681, 354–358). At room temperature the longest-wave emission is stimulated by a magnetic field, which indicates that at least part of the emission is delayed fluorescence brought about by a reversal of the primary charge separation. Below about 150 K no stimulation was observed. The excitation spectra for short-wave emission (828 nm) were very similar to the absorption spectrum of the isolated antenna bacteriochlorophyll a-protein complex, and showed bands of bacteriochlorophyll a only. This indicates that two forms of the antenna protein exist that are spectroscopically similar: a soluble form that is released by treatment with guanidine hydrochloride and a bound form that remains attached to the reaction center complex. The bands of the antenna complexes were weak in the excitation spectra of the 838 nm fluorescence, which indicates that the efficiency of energy transfer to the reaction center complex is low.

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