AI Article Synopsis

  • Primary electric charge separation in photosynthesis occurs in reaction centers, while auxiliary pigment-protein complexes called antennas enhance efficiency by transferring absorbed light energy.
  • LHCII, the main antenna complex in plants, exists in a trimeric form, which stabilizes the thylakoid membrane structure within chloroplasts.
  • Chlorophyll fluorescence studies show that trimers of LHCII facilitate more efficient energy transfer compared to monomers, suggesting that the organization influences antenna functionality and may allow for regulation based on their structural transitions.

Article Abstract

The process of primary electric charge separation in photosynthesis takes place in the reaction centers, but photosynthesis can operate efficiently and fluently due to the activity of several pigment-protein complexes called antenna, which absorb light quanta and transfer electronic excitations toward the reaction centers. LHCII is the major photosynthetic pigment-protein antenna complex of plants and appears in the trimeric form. Several recent reports point to trimeric organization of LHCII as a key factor responsible for the chloroplast architecture via stabilization of granal organization of the thylakoid membranes. In the present work, we address the question of whether such an organization could also directly influence the antenna properties of this pigment-protein complex. Chlorophyll fluorescence analysis reveals that excitation energy transfer in LHCII is substantially more efficient in trimers and dissipative energy losses are higher in monomers. It could be concluded that trimers are exceptionally well suited to perform the antenna function. Possibility of fine regulation of the photosynthetic antenna function via the LHCII trimer-monomer transition is also discussed, based on the fluorescence lifetime analysis in a single chloroplast.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b04005DOI Listing

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