The photosystem II kinetic model (diffusion or trap-limited) is still much debated. There is discussion about whether energy transfer from the core antenna (CP47 and CP43) to the reaction center complex (D1-D2-cyt b559) is rate-limiting (transfer to trap-limited). This study investigates this problem in isolated core particles by exploiting the different optical properties of the core antenna and the reaction center complex near 680 nm, due to P680 and an isoenergetic pheophytin. This was used as a marker feature for the reaction center complex. If the transfer to the trap-limited model were correct, assuming excited-state thermalization, the specific reaction center fluorescence decay lifetime should be shorter near 680 nm, where there is reaction center complex specificity, than at the other emission wavelengths. Such a selective reaction center feature was not observed in fluorescence decay measurements. At the experimental resolution used here, we conclude that the trap-limited energy transfer to the reaction center could, at the most, be 20% limiting. Thus, the transfer to the trap-limited model is not supported. A kinetic, compartmental analysis was also performed on the data, taking into account a large number of separate measurements and the associated errors. Target analysis, considering these intermeasurement errors, yielded two minima which adequately describe the fluorescence lifetime data. The nonunique nature of the description is due to the fact that we have taken into consideration these intermeasurement errors. In our case, due to these errors, a correct kinetic model interpretation required additional experimental information.

Fluorescence Lifetime Spectrum of the Plant Photosystem II Core Complex : Photochemistry Does Not Induce Specific Reaction Center Quenching / G. Tumino, A.P. Casazza, E.C.M. Engelmann, F.M. Garlaschi, G. Zucchelli, R.C. Jennings. - In: BIOCHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0006-2960. - 47:39(2008 Sep 30), pp. 10449-10457. [10.1021/bi800831j]

Fluorescence Lifetime Spectrum of the Plant Photosystem II Core Complex : Photochemistry Does Not Induce Specific Reaction Center Quenching

G. Tumino
Primo
;
A.P. Casazza
Secondo
;
E.C.M. Engelmann;F.M. Garlaschi;R.C. Jennings
Ultimo
2008

Abstract

The photosystem II kinetic model (diffusion or trap-limited) is still much debated. There is discussion about whether energy transfer from the core antenna (CP47 and CP43) to the reaction center complex (D1-D2-cyt b559) is rate-limiting (transfer to trap-limited). This study investigates this problem in isolated core particles by exploiting the different optical properties of the core antenna and the reaction center complex near 680 nm, due to P680 and an isoenergetic pheophytin. This was used as a marker feature for the reaction center complex. If the transfer to the trap-limited model were correct, assuming excited-state thermalization, the specific reaction center fluorescence decay lifetime should be shorter near 680 nm, where there is reaction center complex specificity, than at the other emission wavelengths. Such a selective reaction center feature was not observed in fluorescence decay measurements. At the experimental resolution used here, we conclude that the trap-limited energy transfer to the reaction center could, at the most, be 20% limiting. Thus, the transfer to the trap-limited model is not supported. A kinetic, compartmental analysis was also performed on the data, taking into account a large number of separate measurements and the associated errors. Target analysis, considering these intermeasurement errors, yielded two minima which adequately describe the fluorescence lifetime data. The nonunique nature of the description is due to the fact that we have taken into consideration these intermeasurement errors. In our case, due to these errors, a correct kinetic model interpretation required additional experimental information.
chlorophyll-protein complexes ; excitation-energy transfer ; primary charge separation ; crystal-structure ; kinetics ; antenna ; stabilization ; synechocystis ; annihilation ; absorption
30-set-2008
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/60601
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