1991
DOI: 10.1021/bi00237a015
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Fluorescence polarization and low-temperature absorption spectroscopy of a subunit form of light-harvesting complex I from purple photosynthetic bacteria

Abstract: Measurements of polarized fluorescence and CD were made on light-harvesting complex 1 and a subunit form of this complex from Rhodospirillum rubrum, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Rhodobacter capsulatus. The subunit form of LH1, characterized by a near-infrared absorbance band at approximately 820 nm, was obtained by titration of carotenoid-depleted LH1 complexes with the detergent n-octyl beta-D-glucopyranoside as reported by Miller et al. (1987) [Miller J. F., Hinchigeri, S. B., Parkes-Loach, P. S., Callahan, … Show more

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Cited by 137 publications
(148 citation statements)
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“…3 This could then implicate that the large Stark spectrum of LH1 arises from the "real" R BChl 2 dimer. Notice that in the earlier studies of the B820 subunit by means of CD, polarized fluorescence, and singlet minus triplet spectroscopies, 45,46,53 the interaction energy within this subunit was estimated as M ) 230 cm -1 and the site inhomogeneity as 2M at 77 K and 3M at room temperature, i.e., 460 and 690 cm -1 , respectively, in very reasonable agreement with our results.…”
Section: Shape and Amplitude Of Difference Absorption Spectrumsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…3 This could then implicate that the large Stark spectrum of LH1 arises from the "real" R BChl 2 dimer. Notice that in the earlier studies of the B820 subunit by means of CD, polarized fluorescence, and singlet minus triplet spectroscopies, 45,46,53 the interaction energy within this subunit was estimated as M ) 230 cm -1 and the site inhomogeneity as 2M at 77 K and 3M at room temperature, i.e., 460 and 690 cm -1 , respectively, in very reasonable agreement with our results.…”
Section: Shape and Amplitude Of Difference Absorption Spectrumsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…The difference in the maximum absorption of the aTyr43 (865 nm) and aPhe43 (853 nm) mutants in the DD13 deletion background, at room temperature, is 12 nm and, assuming the residues produce similar structural perturbations, and hence blue shifts, this may represent the extent of the red shift that could be attributed to the H bond. It is clear from the in vitro work (16,17,22,41,42) When looking at the aligned sequences of LH1 and LH2 complexes it is apparent that aTrp43 is one ofthe most highly conserved residues in LH1 and that the equivalent residue in LH2 is Tyr44. From this work we have strong evidence that this Trp is H-bonded to one of the bound bchls, giving rise to a component of the 1640-cm-1 peak, which is a feature of all LH1 Raman spectra; thus it is probable that this H-bond arrangement exists in all LH1 complexes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The latter value is obtained when a computationally determined value of C = 64.38Å 3 eV [7], which corresponds to a transition dipole moment of 11 D, is rescaled to match the experimental value 6.3 D [26] of the transition dipole moment. For simplicity we assume that the coupling between neighboring (and all other) BChls is given by W ij (t), even though the short distance between neighboring BChls does not justify limitation to only the leading term of a multipole expansion.…”
Section: A Time-dependent Hamiltonian Of the B850 Ringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We can now determine the absorption rate for radiation by employing this expression instead of ˆ µ(t) in (26). In doing so we consider the time average (denoted by an overbar) over a cycle of the radiation field and use exp(±iωt) = 0.…”
Section: A Time-dependent Hamiltonian Of the B850 Ringmentioning
confidence: 99%