Low-energy absorption and luminescence of higher plant photosystem II core samples

Joseph L. Hughes, Paul J. Smith, Ron J. Pace, Elmars Krausz*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    12 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The charge-separating state of PSII has been recently assigned as a homogeneously broadened band peaking at 705 nm. The possibility of observing emission due to luminescence from the charge-separating state was investigated. Emission from the charge-separating state is predicted to be both broad and substantially Stokes shifted. Our PSII cores show an easily observable and broad emission peaking near 735 nm when excited at 707 nm and beyond for temperatures below 100 K as well as the well-known F685 and F695 nm emission when excited at 633 nm. However, the 735 nm emission bears a close correspondence to that previously reported for the light harvesting pigment of photosystem I (PSI), LHCI-730, and we attribute our observed emission to a minor contamination of our sample with this protein. High sensitivity circular dichroism (CD) spectra establish that LHCI and/or PSI contamination of our samples does not contribute significantly to the absorption seen in the 700-730 nm region. Furthermore, systematic illumination-induced absorption changes seen in this region are shown to quantitatively track with charge separation and the subsequent secondary acceptor plastoquinone (QA) acceptor anion formation. These results confirm that absorption in the 700-730 nm region is associated with the reaction centre of active PSII.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)284-287
    Number of pages4
    JournalJournal of Luminescence
    Volume122-123
    Issue number1-2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jan 2007

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