Web Release Date: March 14,
Time-Resolved Absorption and Emission Show that the CP43' Antenna Ring of
Iron-Stressed Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 Is Efficiently Coupled to the
Photosystem I Reaction Center Core



and
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Center for the Study of Early Events in Photosynthesis, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604, and Wolfson Laboratories, Department of Biological Sciences, Imperial College of Science, Technology & Medicine, London SW7 2AY, U.K.
Received October 10, 2002
Revised Manuscript Received January 13, 2003
Abstract:
Excitation energy transfer and trapping processes in an iron stress-induced supercomplex of
photosystem I from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 were studied by time-resolved
absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy on femtosecond and picosecond time scales. The data provide
evidence that the energy transfer dynamics of the CP43'-PSI supercomplex are consistent with energy
transfer processes that occur in the Chl a network of the PSI trimer antenna. The most significant absorbance
changes in the CP43'-PSI supercomplex are observed within the first several picoseconds after the
excitation into the spectral region of CP43' absorption (665 nm). The difference time-resolved spectra
(
A) resulting from subtraction of the PSI trimer kinetic data from the CP43'-PSI supercomplex data
indicate three energy transfer processes with time constants of 0.2, 1.7, and 10 ps. The 0.2 ps kinetic
phase is tentatively interpreted as arising from energy transfer processes originating within or between
the CP43' complexes. The 1.7 ps phase is interpreted as possibly arising from energy transfer from the
CP43' ring to the PSI trimer via closely located clusters of Chl a in CP43' and the PSI core, while the
slower 10 ps process might reflect the overall excitation transfer from the CP43' ring to the PSI trimer.
These three fast kinetic phases are followed by a 40 ps overall excitation decay in the supercomplex, in
contrast to a 25 ps overall decay observed in the trimer complex without CP43'. Excitation of Chl a in
both the CP43'-PSI antenna supercomplex and the PSI trimer completely decays within 100 ps, resulting
in the formation of P700+. The data indicate that there is a rapid and efficient energy transfer between the
outer antenna ring and the PSI reaction center complex.
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