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Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Biohybrid Photosynthetic Antenna Complexes for Enhanced Light-Harvesting

Joseph W. Springer; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach; Kanumuri Ramesh Reddy; Michael Krayer; Jieying Jiao; Gregory M. Lee; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Michelle A. Harris; Christine Kirmaier; David F. Bocian; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Dewey Holten; Paul A. Loach

Biohybrid antenna systems have been constructed that contain synthetic chromophores attached to 31mer analogues of the bacterial photosynthetic core light-harvesting (LH1) β-polypeptide. The peptides are engineered with a Cys site for bioconjugation with maleimide-terminated chromophores, which include synthetic bacteriochlorins (BC1, BC2) with strong near-infrared absorption and commercial dyes Oregon green (OGR) and rhodamine red (RR) with strong absorption in the blue-green to yellow-orange regions. The peptides place the Cys 14 (or 6) residues before a native His site that binds bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl-a) and, like the native LH proteins, have high helical content as probed by single-reflection IR spectroscopy. The His residue associates with BChl-a as in the native LH1 β-polypeptide to form dimeric ββ-subunit complexes [31mer(-14Cys)X/BChl](2), where X is one of the synthetic chromophores. The native-like BChl-a dimer has Q(y) absorption at 820 nm and serves as the acceptor for energy from light absorbed by the appended synthetic chromophore. The energy-transfer characteristics of biohybrid complexes have been characterized by steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence and absorption measurements. The quantum yields of energy transfer from a synthetic chromophore located 14 residues from the BChl-coordinating His site are as follows: OGR (0.30) < RR (0.60) < BC2 (0.90). Oligomeric assemblies of the subunit complexes [31mer(-14Cys)X/BChl](n) are accompanied by a bathochromic shift of the Q(y) absorption of the BChl-a oligomer as far as the 850-nm position found in cyclic native photosynthetic LH2 complexes. Room-temperature stabilized oligomeric biohybrids have energy-transfer quantum yields comparable to those of the dimeric subunit complexes as follows: OGR (0.20) < RR (0.80) < BC1 (0.90). Thus, the new biohybrid antennas retain the energy-transfer and self-assembly characteristics of the native antenna complexes, offer enhanced coverage of the solar spectrum, and illustrate a versatile paradigm for the construction of artificial LH systems.


Chemical Science | 2013

Palette of lipophilic bioconjugatable bacteriochlorins for construction of biohybrid light-harvesting architectures

Kanumuri Ramesh Reddy; Jianbing Jiang; Michael Krayer; Michelle A. Harris; Joseph W. Springer; Eunkyung Yang; Jieying Jiao; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Dinesh R. Pandithavidana; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach; Christine Kirmaier; Paul A. Loach; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey

The challenge of creating both pigment building blocks and scaffolding to organize a large number of such pigments has long constituted a central impediment to the construction of artificial light-harvesting architectures. Light-harvesting (LH) antennas in photosynthetic bacteria are formed in a two-tiered self-assembly process wherein (1) a peptide dyad containing two bacteriochlorophyll a molecules forms, and (2) the dyads associate to form cyclic oligomers composed of 8 or 9 dyads in LH2 and 15 or 16 in LH1 of purple photosynthetic bacteria. While such antenna systems generally have near-quantitative transfer of excitation energy among pigments, only a fraction of the solar spectrum is typically absorbed. A platform architecture for study of light-harvesting phenomena has been developed that employs native photosynthetic peptide analogs, native bacteriochlorophyll a, and synthetic near-infrared-absorbing bacteriochlorins. Herein, the syntheses of 10 lipophilic bacteriochlorins are reported, of which 7 contain bioconjugatable handles (maleimide, iodoacetamide, formyl, carboxylic acid) for attachment to the peptide chassis. The bioconjugatable bacteriochlorins typically exhibit a long-wavelength absorption band in the range 710 to 820 nm, fluorescence yield of 0.1–0.2, and lifetime of the lowest singlet excited state of 2–5 ns. The α-helical structure of the native-like peptide is retained upon conjugation with a synthetic bacteriochlorin, as judged by single-reflection infrared studies. Static and time-resolved optical studies of the oligomeric biohybrid architectures in aqueous detergent solution reveal efficient (∼90%) excitation energy transfer from the attached bacteriochlorin to the native-like bacteriochlorophyll a sites. The biohybrid light-harvesting architectures thus exploit the self-constituting features of the natural systems yet enable versatile incorporation of members from a palette of synthetic chromophores, thereby opening the door to a wide variety of studies in artificial photosynthesis.


Chemical Science | 2013

Integration of multiple chromophores with native photosynthetic antennas to enhance solar energy capture and delivery

Michelle A. Harris; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach; Joseph W. Springer; Jianbing Jiang; Elizabeth C. Martin; Pu Qian; Jieying Jiao; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Christine Kirmaier; John D. Olsen; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; C. Neil Hunter; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Paul A. Loach

Native length bacterial light-harvesting peptides carrying covalently attached designer chromophores have been created that self-assemble with native bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) to afford stable antennas with enhanced spectral coverage. Native (or native-like) α- and β-peptides interact with each other and BChl a to form a heterodimeric (αβ-dyad) unit that can then oligomerize to form biohybrid analogs of the bacterial core light-harvesting complex (LH1). Pairs of distinct synthetic chromophores were incorporated in αβ-dyads at selected distances from the BChl a target site (position 0). Two designs were explored. One design used green-yellow absorbing/emitting Oregon Green at the −34 position (toward the N-terminus relative to the BChl a coordination site) of β and orange-red absorbing/emitting Rhodamine Red at the −20 position of α, which combine with BChl a to give homogeneous oligomers. A second design used two different β-peptide conjugates, one with Oregon Green at the −34 position and the second with a near-infrared absorbing/emitting synthetic bacteriochlorin at the −14 position, which combine with α and BChl a to give a heterogeneous mixture of oligomers. The designs afford antennas with ∼45 to ∼60 pigments, provide enhanced spectral coverage across the visible and near-infrared regions relative to native antennas, and accommodate pigments at remote sites that contribute to solar light harvesting via an energy-transfer cascade. The efficiencies of energy-transfer to the BChl a target in the biohybrid antennas are comparable to native antennas, as revealed by static and time-resolved absorption and emission studies. The results show that the biohybrid approach, where designer chromophores are integrated via semisynthesis with native-like scaffolding, constitutes a versatile platform technology for rapid prototyping of antennas for solar energy capture without the laborious synthesis typically required for creating artificial photosynthetic light-harvesting architectures.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Self-Assembled Light-Harvesting System from Chromophores in Lipid Vesicles.

Tuba Sahin; Michelle A. Harris; Pothiappan Vairaprakash; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Vijaya Subramanian; Andrew P. Shreve; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey

Lipid vesicles are used as the organizational structure of self-assembled light-harvesting systems. Following analysis of 17 chromophores, six were selected for inclusion in vesicle-based antennas. The complementary absorption features of the chromophores span the near-ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared region. Although the overall concentration of the pigments is low (~1 μM for quantitative spectroscopic studies) in a cuvette, the lipid-vesicle system affords high concentration (≥10 mM) in the bilayer for efficient energy flow from donor to acceptor. Energy transfer was characterized in 13 representative binary mixtures using static techniques (fluorescence-excitation versus absorptance spectra, quenching of donor fluorescence, modeling emission spectra of a mixture versus components) and time-resolved spectroscopy (fluorescence, ultrafast absorption). Binary donor-acceptor systems that employ a boron-dipyrrin donor (S0 ↔ S1 absorption/emission in the blue-green) and a chlorin or bacteriochlorin acceptor (S0 ↔ S1 absorption/emission in the red or near-infrared) have an average excitation-energy-transfer efficiency (ΦEET) of ~50%. Binary systems with a chlorin donor and a chlorin or bacteriochlorin acceptor have ΦEET ∼ 85%. The differences in ΦEET generally track the donor-fluorescence/acceptor-absorption spectral overlap within a dipole-dipole coupling (Förster) mechanism. Substantial deviation from single-exponential decay of the excited donor (due to the dispersion of donor-acceptor distances) is expected and observed. The time profiles and resulting ΦEET are modeled on the basis of (Förster) energy transfer between chromophores relatively densely packed in a two-dimensional compartment. Initial studies of two ternary and one quaternary combination of chromophores show the enhanced spectral coverage and energy-transfer efficacy expected on the basis of the binary systems. Collectively, this approach may provide one of the simplest designs for self-assembled light-harvesting systems that afford broad solar collection and efficient energy transfer.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2015

Effects of Substituents on Synthetic Analogs of Chlorophylls. Part 4: How Formyl Group Location Dictates the Spectral Properties of Chlorophylls b, d and f

Jonathan M. Yuen; Michelle A. Harris; Mengran Liu; James R. Diers; Christine Kirmaier; David F. Bocian; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Dewey Holten

Photosynthetic organisms are adapted to light characteristics in their habitat in part via the spectral characteristics of the associated chlorophyll pigments, which differ in the position of a formyl group around the chlorin macrocycle (chlorophylls b, d, f) or no formyl group (chlorophyll a). To probe the origin of this spectral tuning, the photophysical and electronic structural properties of a new set of synthetic chlorins are reported. The zinc and free base chlorins have a formyl group at either the 2‐ or 3‐position. The four compounds have fluorescence yields in the range 0.19–0.28 and singlet excited‐state lifetimes of ca 4 ns for zinc chelates and ca 8 ns for the free base forms. The photophysical properties of the 2‐ and 3‐formyl zinc chlorins are similar to those observed previously for 13‐formyl or 3,13‐diformyl chlorins, but differ markedly from those for 7‐formyl analogs. Molecular‐orbital characteristics obtained from density functional theory (DFT) calculations were used as input to spectral simulations employing the four‐orbital model. The analysis has uncovered the key changes in electronic structure engendered by the presence/location of a formyl group at various macrocycle positions, which is relevant to understanding the distinct spectral properties of the natural chlorophylls a, b, d and f.


Photosynthesis Research | 2014

Versatile design of biohybrid light-harvesting architectures to tune location, density, and spectral coverage of attached synthetic chromophores for enhanced energy capture

Michelle A. Harris; Jianbing Jiang; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Jieying Jiao; Masahiko Taniguchi; Christine Kirmaier; Paul A. Loach; David F. Bocian; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Dewey Holten; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach

Biohybrid antennas built upon chromophore–polypeptide conjugates show promise for the design of efficient light-capturing modules for specific purposes. Three new designs, each of which employs analogs of the β-polypeptide from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, have been investigated. In the first design, amino acids at seven different positions on the polypeptide were individually substituted with cysteine, to which a synthetic chromophore (bacteriochlorin or Oregon Green) was covalently attached. The polypeptide positions are at –2, –6, –10, –14, –17, –21, and –34 relative to the 0-position of the histidine that coordinates bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a). All chromophore–polypeptides readily formed LH1-type complexes upon combination with the α-polypeptide and BChl a. Efficient energy transfer occurs from the attached chromophore to the circular array of 875 nm absorbing BChl a molecules (denoted B875). In the second design, use of two attachment sites (positions –10 and –21) on the polypeptide affords (1) double the density of chromophores per polypeptide and (2) a highly efficient energy-transfer relay from the chromophore at –21 to that at –10 and on to B875. In the third design, three spectrally distinct bacteriochlorin–polypeptides were prepared (each attached to cysteine at the –14 position) and combined in an ~1:1:1 mixture to form a heterogeneous mixture of LH1-type complexes with increased solar coverage and nearly quantitative energy transfer from each bacteriochlorin to B875. Collectively, the results illustrate the great latitude of the biohybrid approach for the design of diverse light-harvesting systems.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2014

Enhanced light-harvesting capacity by micellar assembly of free accessory chromophores and LH1-like antennas

Michelle A. Harris; Tuba Sahin; Jianbing Jiang; Pothiappan Vairaprakash; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Christine Kirmaier; Paul A. Loach; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey

Biohybrid light‐harvesting antennas are an emerging platform technology with versatile tailorability for solar‐energy conversion. These systems combine the proven peptide scaffold unit utilized for light harvesting by purple photosynthetic bacteria with attached synthetic chromophores to extend solar coverage beyond that of the natural systems. Herein, synthetic unattached chromophores are employed that partition into the organized milieu (e.g. detergent micelles) that house the LH1‐like biohybrid architectures. The synthetic chromophores include a hydrophobic boron‐dipyrrin dye (A1) and an amphiphilic bacteriochlorin (A2), which transfer energy with reasonable efficiency to the bacteriochlorophyll acceptor array (B875) of the LH1‐like cyclic oligomers. The energy‐transfer efficiencies are markedly increased upon covalent attachment of a bacteriochlorin (B1 or B2) to the peptide scaffold, where the latter likely acts as an energy‐transfer relay site for the (potentially diffusing) free chromophores. The efficiencies are consistent with a Förster (through‐space) mechanism for energy transfer. The overall energy‐transfer efficiency from the free chromophores via the relay to the target site can approach those obtained previously by relay‐assisted energy transfer from chromophores attached at distant sites on the peptides. Thus, the use of free accessory chromophores affords a simple design to enhance the overall light‐harvesting capacity of biohybrid LH1‐like architectures.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Protein influence on charge-asymmetry of the primary donor in photosynthetic bacterial reaction centers containing a heterodimer: effects on photophysical properties and electron transfer.

Michelle A. Harris; Craig A. Luehr; Kaitlyn M. Faries; Marc J. Wander; Lucas L. Kressel; Dewey Holten; Deborah K. Hanson; Philip D. Laible; Christine Kirmaier

The substantial electronic distinctions between bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) and its Mg-free analogue bacteriopheophytin (BPh) are exploited in two sets of Rhodobacter capsulatus reaction center (RC) mutants that contain a heterodimeric BChl-BPh primary electron donor (D). The BPh component of the M-heterodimer (Mhd) or L-heterodimer (Lhd) obtains from substituting a Leu for His M200 or for His L173, respectively. Lhd-β and Mhd-β RCs serve as the initial templates in the two mutant sets, where β denotes that the L-side BPh acceptor (HL) has been replaced by a BChl (due to substituting His for Leu M212). Three variants each of Lhd-β and Mhd-β mutants were constructed: (1) a swap (denoted YF) of the native Phe (L181) and Tyr (M208) residues, which flank D and the nearby M- and L-side monomeric BChl cofactors, respectively, giving Tyr (L181) and Phe (M208); (2) addition of a hydrogen bond (denoted L131LH) to the ring V keto group of the L-macrocycle of D, via replacing the native Leu at L131 with His; (3) the combination of 1 and 2. A low yield of electron transfer (ET) to the M-side BPh (HM) is observed in all four Lhd-containing RCs. Comparison with the yield of ET to β on the L-side shows that electron density on the L-macrocycle of D* favors ET to the M-side cofactors and vice versa. Increasing or decreasing the electronic asymmetry of D* via the YF, L131LH mutations or the combination results in consistent trends in the characteristics of the long-wavelength ground state absorption band of D, the rate constant of internal conversion of D* to the ground state, and the rate constants for ET to both the L- and M-side cofactors. A surprising correlation is that an increase in the charge asymmetry in D* not only increases the D* internal-conversion rate constant, but also the rate constants for ET to both the L- and M-side cofactors, spanning time scales of tens of picoseconds to several nanoseconds. The YF swap has a previously unrecognized effect on the electronic asymmetry of D*, resulting in increased charge asymmetry for the Mhd and decreased charge asymmetry for the Lhd. This result indicates that the native Tyr (M208) and Phe (L181) in the wild-type RC promote an electron distribution in P* that is the reverse of that favorable for ET to the photoactive L-branch. This conclusion reinforces the view that the native configuration of these residues promotes ET to the L branch primarily by poising the free energies of the charge-separated states. Overall, this work addresses the extent to which electronic couplings complement energetics in underpinning the directionality of ET in the bacterial RC.


ChemPhotoChem | 2018

Expanding Covalent Attachment Sites of Nonnative Chromophores to Encompass the C-Terminal Hydrophilic Domain in Biohybrid Light-Harvesting Architectures

Don Hood; Tuba Sahin; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach; Jieying Jiao; Michelle A. Harris; Preston L. Dilbeck; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Christine Kirmaier; Paul A. Loach; David F. Bocian; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Dewey Holten


Archive | 2014

Energy and Electron Transfer in Photosynthetic Reaction Centers and Biohybrid Antenna Complexes

Michelle A. Harris

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Dewey Holten

Washington University in St. Louis

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Christine Kirmaier

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jonathan S. Lindsey

North Carolina State University

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Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jieying Jiao

University of California

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Jianbing Jiang

North Carolina State University

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Joseph W. Springer

Washington University in St. Louis

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