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Two-photon absorption and excitation spectroscopy of carotenoids, chlorophylls and pigment–protein complexes

Authors :
Heiko Lokstein
Alexander Betke
Daniel A. Gacek
Peter Walla
Julia Nowak
Source :
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics. 23:8731-8738
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2021.

Abstract

In addition to (bacterio)chlorophylls, (B)Chls, photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes bind carotenoids (Cars) that fulfil various important functions which are not fully understood, yet. However, certain excited states of Cars are optically one-photon forbidden ("dark") and can potentially undergo excitation energy transfer (EET) to (B)Chls following two-photon absorption (TPA). The amount of EET is reflected by the differences in TPA and two-photon excitation (TPE) spectra of a complex (multi-pigment) system. Since it is technically and analytically demanding to resolve optically forbidden states, different studies reported varying contributions of Cars and Chls to TPE/TPA spectra. In a study using well-defined 1 : 1 Car-tetrapyrrole dyads TPE contributions of tetrapyrrole molecules, including Chls, and Cars were measured. In these experiments, TPE of Cars dominated over Chl a TPE in a broad wavelength range. Another study suggested only minor contributions of Cars to TPE spectra of pigment-protein complexes such as the plant main light-harvesting complex (LHCII), in particular for wavelengths longer than ∼600/1200 nm. By joining forces and a combined analysis of all available data by both teams, we try to resolve this apparent contradiction. Here, we demonstrate that reconstruction of a wide spectral range of TPE for LHCII and photosystem I (PSI) requires both, significant Car and Chl contributions. Direct comparison of TPE spectra obtained in both studies demonstrates a good agreement of the primary data. We conclude that in TPE spectra of LHCII and PSI, the contribution of Chls is dominating above 600/1200 nm, whereas the contributions of forbidden Car states increase particularly at wavelengths shorter than 600/1200 nm. Estimates of Car contributions to TPA as well as TPE spectra are given for various wavelengths.

Details

ISSN :
14639084 and 14639076
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f1ce93e5a8a2e75df66e1e3eb757930
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1cp00656h