Publication | Open Access
Symmetry matters for the electronic structure of core complexes from <i>Rhodopseudomonas palustris</i> and <i>Rhodobacter sphaeroides</i> PufX <sup>−</sup>
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Citations
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References
2007
Year
Crystal StructureRhodopseudomonas PalustrisPhotobiologyMolecular BiologyExcitation Energy TransferLight-harvesting 1Electronic StructureUnicellular OrganismProtein X-ray CrystallographyCore ComplexesPhotosynthesisPhotophysical PropertyBiophysicsProkaryotic SystemBiochemistryPhotochemistryMechanistic PhotochemistryCrystallographyStructural BiologyNatural SciencesMolecular ComplexMolecular BiophysicsMedicineSymmetry MattersSingle-molecule Fluorescence-excitation Spectra
Low-temperature (1.4 K), single-molecule fluorescence-excitation spectra have been recorded for individual reaction center-light-harvesting 1 complexes from Rhodopseudomonas palustris and the PufX(-) strain of Rhodobacter sphaeroides. More than 80% of the complexes from Rb. sphaeroides show only broad absorption bands, whereas nearly all of the complexes from Rps. palustris also have a narrow line at the low-energy end of their spectrum. We describe how the presence of this narrow feature indicates the presence of a gap in the electronic structure of the light-harvesting 1 complex from Rps. palustris, which provides strong support for the physical gap that was previously modeled in its x-ray crystal structure.
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