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Dive into the research topics where Cvetelin Vasilev is active.

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Featured researches published by Cvetelin Vasilev.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Assembly of functional photosystem complexes in Rhodobacter sphaeroides incorporating carotenoids from the spirilloxanthin pathway

Shuang C. Chi; David J. Mothersole; Preston L. Dilbeck; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Hao Zhang; Pu Qian; Cvetelin Vasilev; Katie J. Grayson; Philip J. Jackson; Elizabeth C. Martin; Ying Li; Dewey Holten; C. Neil Hunter

Carotenoids protect the photosynthetic apparatus against harmful radicals arising from the presence of both light and oxygen. They also act as accessory pigments for harvesting solar energy, and are required for stable assembly of many light-harvesting complexes. In the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter (Rba.) sphaeroides phytoene desaturase (CrtI) catalyses three sequential desaturations of the colourless carotenoid phytoene, extending the number of conjugated carbon–carbon double bonds, N, from three to nine and producing the yellow carotenoid neurosporene; subsequent modifications produce the yellow/red carotenoids spheroidene/spheroidenone (N = 10/11). Genomic crtI replacements were used to swap the native three-step Rba. sphaeroides CrtI for the four-step Pantoea agglomerans enzyme, which re-routed carotenoid biosynthesis and culminated in the production of 2,2′-diketo-spirilloxanthin under semi-aerobic conditions. The new carotenoid pathway was elucidated using a combination of HPLC and mass spectrometry. Premature termination of this new pathway by inactivating crtC or crtD produced strains with lycopene or rhodopin as major carotenoids. All of the spirilloxanthin series carotenoids are accepted by the assembly pathways for LH2 and RC–LH1–PufX complexes. The efficiency of carotenoid-to-bacteriochlorophyll energy transfer for 2,2′-diketo-spirilloxanthin (15 conjugated C 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 111111111111 000000000000 111111111111 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 C bonds; N = 15) in LH2 complexes is low, at 35%. High energy transfer efficiencies were obtained for neurosporene (N = 9; 94%), spheroidene (N = 10; 96%) and spheroidenone (N = 11; 95%), whereas intermediate values were measured for lycopene (N = 11; 64%), rhodopin (N = 11; 62%) and spirilloxanthin (N = 13; 39%). The variety and stability of these novel Rba. sphaeroides antenna complexes make them useful experimental models for investigating the energy transfer dynamics of carotenoids in bacterial photosynthesis.


The Plant Cell | 2014

Nanodomains of Cytochrome b6f and Photosystem II Complexes in Spinach Grana Thylakoid Membranes

Matthew P. Johnson; Cvetelin Vasilev; John D. Olsen; C. Neil Hunter

Colocalization of cytochrome b6f and photosystem II complexes creates nanodomains that facilitate rapid exchange of the lipophilic electron carrier plastoquinone in the crowded thylakoid grana membrane. The cytochrome b6f (cytb6f) complex plays a central role in photosynthesis, coupling electron transport between photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I to the generation of a transmembrane proton gradient used for the biosynthesis of ATP. Photosynthesis relies on rapid shuttling of electrons by plastoquinone (PQ) molecules between PSII and cytb6f complexes in the lipid phase of the thylakoid membrane. Thus, the relative membrane location of these complexes is crucial, yet remains unknown. Here, we exploit the selective binding of the electron transfer protein plastocyanin (Pc) to the lumenal membrane surface of the cytb6f complex using a Pc-functionalized atomic force microscope (AFM) probe to identify the position of cytb6f complexes in grana thylakoid membranes from spinach (Spinacia oleracea). This affinity-mapping AFM method directly correlates membrane surface topography with Pc-cytb6f interactions, allowing us to construct a map of the grana thylakoid membrane that reveals nanodomains of colocalized PSII and cytb6f complexes. We suggest that the close proximity between PSII and cytb6f complexes integrates solar energy conversion and electron transfer by fostering short-range diffusion of PQ in the protein-crowded thylakoid membrane, thereby optimizing photosynthetic efficiency.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Carotenoids are essential for normal levels of dimerisation of the RC-LH1-PufX core complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides: Characterisation of R-26 as a crtB (phytoene synthase) mutant

Irene W. Ng; Peter G. Adams; David J. Mothersole; Cvetelin Vasilev; Elizabeth C. Martin; Helen P. Lang; Jaimey D. Tucker; C. Neil Hunter

Carotenoids play important roles in photosynthesis where they are involved in light-harvesting, in photo-protection and in the assembly and structural stability of light-harvesting and reaction centre complexes. In order to examine the effects of carotenoids on the oligomeric state of the reaction centre-light-harvesting 1 -PufX (RC-LH1-PufX) core complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides two carotenoid-less mutants, TC70 and R-26, were studied. Detergent fractionation showed that in the absence of carotenoids LH2 complexes do not assemble, as expected, but also that core complexes are predominantly found as monomers, although levels of the PufX polypeptide appeared to be unaffected. Analysis of R-26 membranes by electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy reveals arrays of hexagonally packed monomeric RC-LH1-PufX complexes. Transfer of the crtB gene encoding phytoene synthase to TC70 and R-26 restores the normal synthesis of carotenoids demonstrating that the R-26 mutant of Rba. sphaeroides harbours a mutation in crtB, among its other defects. The transconjugant TC70 and R-26 strains containing crtB had regained their ability to assemble wild-type levels of dimeric RC-LH1-PufX core complexes and normal energy transfer pathways were restored, demonstrating that carotenoids are essential for the normal assembly and function of both the LH2 and RC-LH1-PufX complexes in this bacterial photosystem.


ACS Nano | 2013

Photocatalytic Nanolithography of Self-Assembled Monolayers and Proteins

Ehtsham ul-Haq; Samson Patole; Mark Moxey; Esther Amstad; Cvetelin Vasilev; C. Neil Hunter; Graham J. Leggett; Nicholas D. Spencer; Nicholas H. Williams

Self-assembled monolayers of alkylthiolates on gold and alkylsilanes on silicon dioxide have been patterned photocatalytically on sub-100 nm length-scales using both apertured near-field and apertureless methods. Apertured lithography was carried out by means of an argon ion laser (364 nm) coupled to cantilever-type near-field probes with a thin film of titania deposited over the aperture. Apertureless lithography was carried out with a helium–cadmium laser (325 nm) to excite titanium-coated, contact-mode atomic force microscope (AFM) probes. This latter approach is readily implementable on any commercial AFM system. Photodegradation occurred in both cases through the localized photocatalytic degradation of the monolayer. For alkanethiols, degradation of one thiol exposed the bare substrate, enabling refunctionalization of the bare gold by a second, contrasting thiol. For alkylsilanes, degradation of the adsorbate molecule provided a facile means for protein patterning. Lines were written in a protein-resistant film formed by the adsorption of oligo(ethylene glycol)-functionalized trichlorosilanes on glass, leading to the formation of sub-100 nm adhesive, aldehyde-functionalized regions. These were derivatized with aminobutylnitrilotriacetic acid, and complexed with Ni2+, enabling the binding of histidine-labeled green fluorescent protein, which yielded bright fluorescence from 70-nm-wide lines that could be imaged clearly in a confocal microscope.


Molecular Microbiology | 2016

PucC and LhaA direct efficient assembly of the light‐harvesting complexes in Rhodobacter sphaeroides

David J. Mothersole; Philip J. Jackson; Cvetelin Vasilev; Jaimey D. Tucker; Amanda A. Brindley; Mark J. Dickman; C. Neil Hunter

The mature architecture of the photosynthetic membrane of the purple phototroph Rhodobacter sphaeroides has been characterised to a level where an atomic‐level membrane model is available, but the roles of the putative assembly proteins LhaA and PucC in establishing this architecture are unknown. Here we investigate the assembly of light‐harvesting LH2 and reaction centre‐light‐harvesting1‐PufX (RC‐LH1‐PufX) photosystem complexes using spectroscopy, pull‐downs, native gel electrophoresis, quantitative mass spectrometry and fluorescence lifetime microscopy to characterise a series of lhaA and pucC mutants. LhaA and PucC are important for specific assembly of LH1 or LH2 complexes, respectively, but they are not essential; the few LH1 subunits found in ΔlhaA mutants assemble to form normal RC‐LH1‐PufX core complexes showing that, once initiated, LH1 assembly round the RC is cooperative and proceeds to completion. LhaA and PucC form oligomers at sites of initiation of membrane invagination; LhaA associates with RCs, bacteriochlorophyll synthase (BchG), the protein translocase subunit YajC and the YidC membrane protein insertase. These associations within membrane nanodomains likely maximise interactions between pigments newly arriving from BchG and nascent proteins within the SecYEG‐SecDF‐YajC‐YidC assembly machinery, thereby co‐ordinating pigment delivery, the co‐translational insertion of LH polypeptides and their folding and assembly to form photosynthetic complexes.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Torsional tapping atomic force microscopy using T-shaped cantilevers

Nic Mullin; Cvetelin Vasilev; Jaimey D. Tucker; C. Neil Hunter; Christa H. M. Weber; Jamie K. Hobbs

Torsional oscillation of atomic force microscope cantilevers has been shown to offer increased optical lever sensitivity, quality factor, resonant frequency, and stiffness as compared to flexural oscillation. In this letter, T-shaped cantilevers are oscillated torsionally to give a tapping motion at the tip. This gives many of the advantages of small cantilevers, without the requirement for specialized detection optics. In order to demonstrate the capability of this technique, high resolution images of LH2 membrane protein crystal structures are presented. Reduced settle time and tip-sample force under error signal are also demonstrated.


Nano Letters | 2016

Strong Coupling of Localized Surface Plasmons to Excitons in Light-Harvesting Complexes

Anna Tsargorodska; Michaël L. Cartron; Cvetelin Vasilev; Goutham Kodali; Olga Mass; Jeremy J. Baumberg; P. Leslie Dutton; C. Neil Hunter; Päivi Törmä; Graham J. Leggett

Gold nanostructure arrays exhibit surface plasmon resonances that split after attaching light harvesting complexes 1 and 2 (LH1 and LH2) from purple bacteria. The splitting is attributed to strong coupling between the localized surface plasmon resonances and excitons in the light-harvesting complexes. Wild-type and mutant LH1 and LH2 from Rhodobacter sphaeroides containing different carotenoids yield different splitting energies, demonstrating that the coupling mechanism is sensitive to the electronic states in the light harvesting complexes. Plasmon–exciton coupling models reveal different coupling strengths depending on the molecular organization and the protein coverage, consistent with strong coupling. Strong coupling was also observed for self-assembling polypeptide maquettes that contain only chlorins. However, it is not observed for monolayers of bacteriochlorophyll, indicating that strong plasmon–exciton coupling is sensitive to the specific presentation of the pigment molecules.


Nature Communications | 2017

Augmenting light coverage for photosynthesis through YFP-enhanced charge separation at the Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction centre

Katie J. Grayson; Kaitlyn M. Faries; Xia Huang; Pu Qian; Preston L. Dilbeck; Elizabeth C. Martin; Andrew Hitchcock; Cvetelin Vasilev; Jonathan M. Yuen; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Graham J. Leggett; Dewey Holten; Christine Kirmaier; C. Neil Hunter

Photosynthesis uses a limited range of the solar spectrum, so enhancing spectral coverage could improve the efficiency of light capture. Here, we show that a hybrid reaction centre (RC)/yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) complex accelerates photosynthetic growth in the bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The structure of the RC/YFP-light-harvesting 1 (LH1) complex shows the position of YFP attachment to the RC-H subunit, on the cytoplasmic side of the RC complex. Fluorescence lifetime microscopy of whole cells and ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy of purified RC/YFP complexes show that the YFP–RC intermolecular distance and spectral overlap between the emission of YFP and the visible-region (QX) absorption bands of the RC allow energy transfer via a Förster mechanism, with an efficiency of 40±10%. This proof-of-principle study demonstrates the feasibility of increasing spectral coverage for harvesting light using non-native genetically-encoded light-absorbers, thereby augmenting energy transfer and trapping in photosynthesis.


Materials Today | 2009

‘Watching’ processes in soft matter with SPM

Jamie K. Hobbs; Nic Mullin; Christa H. M. Weber; Oliver E. Farrance; Cvetelin Vasilev

Scanning probe microscopy (SPM) techniques can obtain nanoscale images of soft materials in almost any environment and over a wide range of temperatures. Being non-destructive, processes such as crystallization can be followed in-situ, and the effect of changes in temperature on structures can be monitored at the nanometre scale. The application of these techniques over recent years has lead to a real change in our understanding of many fundamental processes. The capabilities of scanning probe microscopes are continuously being enhanced, with recent developments in high speed scanning and material property mapping promising to significantly broaden soft matter applications. Here a personal overview of progress over the last decade in the development and application of SPM to following processes in soft matter will be provided, and a look forward to future developments in the field.


Langmuir | 2014

Reversible switching between nonquenched and quenched states in nanoscale linear arrays of plant light-harvesting antenna complexes.

Cvetelin Vasilev; Matthew P. Johnson; Edward Gonzales; Lin Wang; Alexander V. Ruban; Gabriel A. Montaño; Ashley J. Cadby; C. Neil Hunter

A simple and robust nanolithographic method that allows sub-100 nm chemical patterning on a range of oxide surfaces was developed in order to fabricate nanoarrays of plant light-harvesting LHCII complexes. The site-specific immobilization and the preserved functionality of the LHCII complexes were confirmed by fluorescence emission spectroscopy. Nanopatterned LHCII trimers could be reversibly switched between fluorescent and quenched states by controlling the detergent concentration in the imaging buffer. A 3-fold quenching of the average fluorescence intensity was accompanied by a decrease in the average (amplitude-weighted) fluorescence lifetime from approximately 2.24 ns to approximately 0.4 ns, attributed to the intrinsic ability of LHCII to switch between fluorescent and quenched states upon changes in its conformational state. The nanopatterning methodology was extended by immobilizing a second protein, the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP), onto LHCII-free areas of the chemically patterned surfaces. This very simple surface chemistry, which allows simultaneous selective immobilization and therefore sorting of the two types of protein molecules on the surface, is a key underpinning step toward the integration of LHCII into switchable biohybrid antenna constructs.

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