Rhodopseudomonas palustris belongs to the group of purple bacteria that have the ability to produce LH2 complexes with unusual absorption spectra when they are grown at low-light intensity. This ability is often related to the presence of multiple genes encoding the antenna apoproteins. Here we report, for the first time to our knowledge, direct evidence that individual low-light LH2 complexes have a heterogeneous alphabeta-apoprotein composition that modulates the site energies of Bchl a molecules, producing absorption bands at 800, 820, and 850 nm. The arrangement of the Bchl a molecules in the "tightly coupled ring" can be modeled by nine alphabeta-Bchls dimers, such that the Bchls bound to six alphabeta-pairs have B820-like site energies and the remaining Bchl a molecules have B850-like site energies. Furthermore, the experimental data can only be satisfactorily modeled when these six alphabeta-pairs with B820 Bchl a molecules are distributed such that the symmetry of the assembly is reduced to C(3). It is also clear from the measured single-molecule spectra that the energies of the electronically excited states in the mixed B820/850 ring are mainly influenced by diagonal disorder.
We have revisited the RC-LH1 complex from Rhodopseudomonas (Rps.) acidophila for single-molecule spectroscopy. For the current study the pigment-protein complexes were stabilized in the detergent buffer solution using a relatively mild detergent (dodecyl-β-D-maltoside (DDM) instead of lauryldimethylamine N-oxide (LDAO)). This leads to a significant reduction of the fraction of broken/dissociated RC-LH1 complexes with respect to previous studies and has allowed us to investigate a sufficiently large sample of individual RC-LH1 complexes. For most of the complexes the fluorescence-excitation spectra exhibit a narrow spectral feature at the red end of the spectrum. Analysis of the statistics of the spectral properties yields a close resemblance with the results obtained on RC-LH1 complexes from Rps. palustris for which a low-resolution X-ray structure is available. Based on this comparison we come to the conclusion that for both species the RC-LH1 complex can be described by the same structural model, that is, an overall elliptical assembly of pigments that features a gap.
We have investigated reaction-center light-harvesting 1 (RC-LH1) complexes from Rhodopseudomonas (Rps.) acidophila in detergent buffer solution and reconstituted into a phospholipid bilayer and compared the results with the outcome of an earlier study conducted on RC-LH1 immobilized in polyvinyl alcohol (PVA). The aim of this study was to test whether the immobilization of the complexes in a PVA matrix might lead to a deterioration of the proteins and thereby limit the accessible information that can be obtained from optical spectroscopy. It has been found that the complexes dissolved in a detergent buffer solution are subject to fast spectral dynamics preventing any meaningful application of single-molecule spectroscopy. In contrast, for the bilayer samples it is revealed that the reconstitution process results in a significantly larger fraction of broken complexes with respect to the preparation of the complexes in a PVA film. Moreover, we find that for the intact complexes the statistics of the key spectral features, such as the spectral separations of the bands and the mutual orientation of their transition-dipole moments, show no variation dependent on using either a bilayer or PVA as a matrix. Given the additional effort involved in the reconstitution process, the lower amount of intact RC-LH1 complexes and, concerning the decisive spectral details, the identical results with respect to embedding the complexes in a PVA matrix, we come to the conclusion that the immobilization of these proteins in a PVA matrix is a good choice for conducting low-temperature experiments on individual light-harvesting complexes.
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