Abstract

Zinc methyl 3-hydroxymethyl-pyropheophorbides-a possessing an acylhydrazinylidene group at the 131-position were prepared by chemically modifying chlorophyll-a, which were models of bacteriochlorophyll-d as one of the light-harvesting pigments in photosynthetic green bacteria. Similar to the self-aggregation of natural bacteriochlorophyll-d in the antenna systems called chlorosomes, some of the synthetic models self-aggregated in an aqueous Triton X-100 solution to give red-shifted and broadened visible absorption bands. The newly appeared oligomeric bands were ascribable to the exciton coupling of the chlorin π-systems along the molecular y-axis, leading to intense circular dichroism bands in the red-shifted Qy and Soret regions. The self-aggregation in the aqueous micelle was dependent on the steric size of the terminal substituent at the 13-acylhydrazone moiety. An increase in the length of the oligomethylene chain as the terminal moved the red-shifted Qy maxima to shorter wavelengths, and branched alkyl and benzyl substitutes afforded no more self-aggregates to leave monomeric species in the hydrophobic environment inside the micelle. These results indicated that the acyl groups on the 13-hydrazone as the alternative of the natural 13-ketone regulated the chlorosome-like self-aggregation.

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