Abstract

The peripheral light-harvesting complex of photosystem I contains red chlorophylls (Chls) that, unlike the typical antenna Chls, absorb at lower energy than the primary electron donor P700. It has been shown that the red-most absorption band arises from two excitonically coupled Chls, although this interaction alone cannot explain the extreme red-shifted emission (25 nm, ∼480 cm−1 for Lhca4 at 4 K) that the red Chls present. Here, we report the electric field-induced absorption changes (Stark effect) on the Qy region of the Lhca4 complex. Two spectral forms, centered around 690 nm and 710 nm, were necessary to describe the absorption and Stark spectra. The analysis of the lowest energy transition yields a high value for the change in dipole moment, Δμ710nm ≈ 8 Df−1, between the ground and excited states as compared with monomeric, Δμ = 1 D, or dimeric, Δμ = 5 D, Chl a in solution. The high value of the Δμ demonstrates that the origin of the red-shifted emission is the mixing of the lowest exciton state with a charge-transfer state of the dimer. This energetic configuration, an excited state with charge-transfer character, is very favorable for the trapping and dissipation of excitations and could be involved in the photoprotective mechanism(s) of the photosystem I complex.

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