June Southall
University of Glasgow
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Featured researches published by June Southall.
Photosynthesis Research | 2004
Richard J. Cogdell; Alastair T. Gardiner; Aleksander W. Roszak; Christopher J. Law; June Southall; Neil W. Isaacs
This Review summarises the current state of research on the structure and function of light-harvesting apparatus in purple photosynthetic bacteria. Particular emphasis is placed on the major open questions still outstanding in this field in addition to what is already known.
Molecular Membrane Biology | 2004
Christopher J. Law; Aleksander W. Roszak; June Southall; Alastair T. Gardiner; Neil W. Isaacs; Richard J. Cogdell
The harvesting of solar radiation by purple photosynthetic bacteria is achieved by circular, integral membrane pigment-protein complexes. There are two main types of light-harvesting complex, termed LH2 and LH1, that function to absorb light energy and to transfer that energy rapidly and efficiently to the photochemical reaction centres where it is trapped. This mini-review describes our present understanding of the structure and function of the purple bacterial light-harvesting complexes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Martin Richter; Jürgen Baier; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; Silke Oellerich; Jörgen Köhler
A unique combination of single-molecule spectroscopy with numerical simulations has allowed us to achieve a refined structural model for the bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) pigment arrangement in reaction center–light-harvesting 1 core complexes of Rhodopseudomonas palustris. Details in the optical spectra, such as spectral separation and mutual polarizations of spectral bands, are compared with results from numerical simulations for various models of the BChl a arrangement that were all well within the 4.8-Å limit of the accuracy of the available x-ray structure. The experimental data are consistent with a geometry where 15 BChl a dimers, each taken homologous to those from light-harvesting 2 complex from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila, are arranged in an overall elliptical structure featuring a gap on the long side of the ellipse.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Gabriela S. Schlau-Cohen; Quan Wang; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; W. E. Moerner
Photosynthetic organisms flourish under low light intensities by converting photoenergy to chemical energy with near unity quantum efficiency and under high light intensities by safely dissipating excess photoenergy and deleterious photoproducts. The molecular mechanisms balancing these two functions remain incompletely described. One critical barrier to characterizing the mechanisms responsible for these processes is that they occur within proteins whose excited-state properties vary drastically among individual proteins and even within a single protein over time. In ensemble measurements, these excited-state properties appear only as the average value. To overcome this averaging, we investigate the purple bacterial antenna protein light harvesting complex 2 (LH2) from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila at the single-protein level. We use a room-temperature, single-molecule technique, the anti-Brownian electrokinetic trap, to study LH2 in a solution-phase (nonperturbative) environment. By performing simultaneous measurements of fluorescence intensity, lifetime, and spectra of single LH2 complexes, we identify three distinct states and observe transitions occurring among them on a timescale of seconds. Our results reveal that LH2 complexes undergo photoactivated switching to a quenched state, likely by a conformational change, and thermally revert to the ground state. This is a previously unobserved, reversible quenching pathway, and is one mechanism through which photosynthetic organisms can adapt to changes in light intensities.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012
Ralf Kunz; Kõu Timpmann; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; Arvi Freiberg; Jürgen Köhler
Evidence for the formation of self-trapped exciton states in photosynthetic antenna complexes is provided by comparing single-molecule fluorescence-excitation and emission spectra that have been recorded from the same individual LH2 complex from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila . While the excitation spectra showed the signatures for the B800 and B850 bands as observed previously, two distinctively different types of emission spectra were found. One group of antenna complexes shows spectra with a relatively narrow spectral profile with a clear signature of a zero-phonon line, whereas the other group of complexes displays spectra that consist only of a broad featureless band. Analysis of these data reveals clear correlations between the spectral position of the emission, the width of the spectral profile, and the associated electron-phonon coupling strength.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Martin Richter; Jürgen Baier; T. Prem; Silke Oellerich; Francesco Francia; Giovanni Venturoli; Dieter Oesterhelt; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; Jürgen Köhler
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.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Marco Ferretti; Ruud Hendrikx; Elisabet Romero; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; Vladimir I. Novoderezhkin; Gregory D. Scholes; Rienk van Grondelle
Energy transfer and trapping in the light harvesting antennae of purple photosynthetic bacteria is an ultrafast process, which occurs with a quantum efficiency close to unity. However the mechanisms behind this process have not yet been fully understood. Recently it was proposed that low-lying energy dark states, such as charge transfer states and polaron pairs, play an important role in the dynamics and directionality of energy transfer. However, it is difficult to directly detect those states because of their small transition dipole moment and overlap with the B850/B870 exciton bands. Here we present a new experimental approach, which combines the selectivity of two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy with the availability of genetically modified light harvesting complexes, to reveal the presence of those dark states in both the genetically modified and the wild-type light harvesting 2 complexes of Rhodopseudomonas palustris. We suggest that Nature has used the unavoidable charge transfer processes that occur when LH pigments are concentrated to enhance and direct the flow of energy.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011
Tobias J. Pflock; Silke Oellerich; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; G. Matthias Ullmann; Jürgen Köhler
We have employed time-resolved spectroscopy on the picosecond time scale in combination with dynamic Monte Carlo simulations to investigate the photophysical properties of light-harvesting 2 (LH2) complexes from the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas acidophila. The variations of the fluorescence transients were studied as a function of the excitation fluence, the repetition rate of the excitation and the sample preparation conditions. Here we present the results obtained on detergent solubilized LH2 complexes, i.e., avoiding intercomplex interactions, and show that a simple four-state model is sufficient to grasp the experimental observations quantitatively without the need for any free parameters. This approach allows us to obtain a quantitative measure for the singlet-triplet annihilation rate in isolated, noninteracting LH2 complexes.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011
Tobias J. Pflock; Silke Oellerich; Lisa Krapf; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; G. Matthias Ullmann; Jürgen Köhler
We performed time-resolved spectroscopy on homoarrays of LH2 complexes from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas acidophila. Variations of the fluorescence transients were monitored as a function of the excitation fluence and the repetition rate of the excitation. These parameters are directly related to the excitation density within the array and to the number of LH2 complexes that still carry a triplet state prior to the next excitation. Comparison of the experimental observations with results from dynamic Monte Carlo simulations for a model cluster of LH2 complexes yields qualitative agreement without the need for any free parameter and reveals the mutual relationship between energy transfer and annihilation processes.
Biophysical Journal | 2014
Ralf Kunz; Kõu Timpmann; June Southall; Richard J. Cogdell; Arvi Freiberg; Jürgen Köhler
We have recorded fluorescence-excitation and emission spectra from single LH2 complexes from Rhodopseudomonas (Rps.) acidophila. Both types of spectra show strong temporal spectral fluctuations that can be visualized as spectral diffusion plots. Comparison of the excitation and emission spectra reveals that for most of the complexes the lowest exciton transition is not observable in the excitation spectra due to the cutoff of the detection filter characteristics. However, from the spectral diffusion plots we have the full spectral and temporal information at hand and can select those complexes for which the excitation spectra are complete. Correlating the red most spectral feature of the excitation spectrum with the blue most spectral feature of the emission spectrum allows an unambiguous assignment of the lowest exciton state. Hence, application of fluorescence-excitation and emission spectroscopy on the same individual LH2 complex allows us to decipher spectral subtleties that are usually hidden in traditional ensemble spectroscopy.