Publication | Closed Access
The Charge-Transfer Character of the S<sub>0</sub> → S<sub>2</sub> Transition in the Carotenoid Peridinin Is Revealed by Stark Spectroscopy
63
Citations
39
References
2005
Year
Excitation Energy TransferCharge-transfer CharacterChemistryChemical BiologyElectronic Excited StateRedox BiologyAbsorption BandCarotenoidCarotenoid Peridinin IsPhotosynthesisBiophysicsBiochemistryPhotochemistrySpectroelectrochemistryPhysical ChemistryPeridinin Absorption BandExcited State PropertyStark SpectroscopyNatural SciencesSpectroscopySolvent PolarityMolecular BiophysicsMedicine
Peridinin, the carotenoid in the peridinin chlorophyll a protein (PCP), was studied by Stark (electroabsorption) spectroscopy to determine the change in electrostatic properties produced on excitation within the absorption band, in methyl tetrahydrofuran (MeTHF) versus ethylene glycol (EG), at 77 K. Strikingly, a large change in the permanent dipole moment (|Deltamu|) was found between the ground state, S(0) (1(1)A(g)(-)), and the Franck-Condon region of the S(2) (1(1)B(u)(+)) excited state, in both MeTHF (22 D) and EG (approximately 27 D), thus revealing the previously unknown charge transfer (CT) character of this pi-pi transition in peridinin. Such a large |Deltamu| produced on excitation, we suggest, facilitates the bending of the lactone moiety, toward which charge transfer occurs, and the subsequent formation of the previously identified intramolecular CT (ICT) state at lower energy. This unexpectedly large S(2) dipole moment, which has not been predicted even from high-level electronic structure calculations, is supported by calculating the shift of the peridinin absorption band as a function of solvent polarity, using the experimentally derived result. Overall, the photoinduced charge transfer uncovered here is expected to affect the excited-state reactivity of peridinin and, within the protein, be important for efficient energy transfer from the carotenoid S(2) and S(1)/ICT states to the chlorophylls in PCP.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1