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Dive into the research topics where Olga Rancova is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga Rancova.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

Static and Dynamic Disorder in Bacterial Light-Harvesting Complex LH2: A 2DES Simulation Study

Olga Rancova; Darius Abramavicius

Two-dimensional coherent electronic spectroscopy (2DES) is a powerful technique in distinguishing homogeneous and inhomogeneous broadening contributions to the spectral line shapes of molecular transitions induced by environment fluctuations. Using an excitonic model of a double-ring LH2 aggregate, we perform simulations of its 2DES spectra and find that the model of a harmonic environment cannot provide a consistent set of parameters for two temperatures: 77 K and room temperature. This indicates the highly anharmonic nature of protein fluctuations for the pigments of the B850 ring. However, the fluctuations of B800 ring pigments can be assumed as harmonic in this temperature range.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Insight into the structure of photosynthetic LH2 aggregate from spectroscopy simulations.

Olga Rancova; Juozas Sulskus; Darius Abramavicius

Using the electrostatic model of intermolecular interactions, we obtain the Frenkel exciton Hamiltonian parameters for the chlorophyll Qy band of a photosynthetic peripheral light harvesting complex LH2 of a purple bacteria Rhodopseudomonas acidophila from structural data. The intermolecular couplings are mostly determined by the chlorophyll relative positions, whereas the molecular transition energies are determined by the background charge distribution of the whole complex. The protonation pattern of titratable residues is used as a tunable parameter. By studying several protonation state scenarios for distinct protein groups and comparing the simulated absorption and circular dichroism spectra to experiment, we determine the most probable configuration of the protonation states of various side groups of the protein.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Probing environment fluctuations by two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy of molecular systems at temperatures below 5 K

Olga Rancova; Ryszard Jankowiak; Darius Abramavicius

Two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectroscopy at cryogenic and room temperatures reveals excitation energy relaxation and transport, as well as vibrational dynamics, in molecular systems. These phenomena are related to the spectral densities of nuclear degrees of freedom, which are directly accessible by means of hole burning and fluorescence line narrowing approaches at low temperatures (few K). The 2D spectroscopy, in principle, should reveal more details about the fluctuating environment than the 1D approaches due to peak extension into extra dimension. By studying the spectral line shapes of a dimeric aggregate at low temperature, we demonstrate that 2D spectra have the potential to reveal the fluctuation spectral densities for different electronic states, the interstate correlation of static disorder and, finally, the time scales of spectral diffusion with high resolution.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Excitons in the LH3 complexes from purple bacteria.

Jevgenij Chmeliov; Egidijus Songaila; Olga Rancova; Andrew Gall; Bruno Robert; Darius Abramavicius; Leonas Valkunas

The noncovalently bound and structurally identical bacteriochlorophyll a chromophores in the peripheral light-harvesting complexes LH2 (B800-850) and LH3 (B800-820) from photosynthetic purple bacteria ensure the variability of the exciton spectra in the near-infrared (820-850 nm) wavelength region. As a result, the spectroscopic properties of the antenna complexes, such as positions of the maxima in the exciton absorption spectra, give rise to very efficient excitation transfer toward the reaction center. In this work, we investigated the possible molecular origin of the excitonically coupled B820 bacteriochlorophylls in LH3 using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, deconvolution of steady-state absorption spectra, and modeling of the electrostatic intermolecular interactions using a charge density coupling approach. Compared to LH2, the upper excitonic level is red-shifted from 755 to 790 nm and is associated with an approximate 2-fold decrease of B820 intrapigment coupling. The absorption properties of LH3 cannot be reproduced by only changing the B850 site energy but also require a different scaling factor to be used to calculate interpigment couplings and a change of histidine protonation state. Several protonation patterns for distinct amino acid groups are presented, giving values of 162-173 cm(-1) at 100 K for the intradimer resonance interaction in the B820 ring.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016

Band Structure of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides Photosynthetic Reaction Center from Low-Temperature Absorption and Hole-Burned Spectra

Olga Rancova; Ryszard Jankowiak; Adam Kell; Mahboobe Jassas; Darius Abramavicius

Persistent/transient spectral hole burning (HB) and computer simulations are used to provide new insight into the excitonic structure and excitation energy transfer of the widely studied bacterial reaction center (bRC) of Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides. We focus on site energies of its cofactors and electrochromic shifts induced in the chemically oxidized (P(+)) and charge-separated (P(+)QM(-)) states. Theoretical models lead to two alternative interpretations of the H-band. On the basis of our experimental and simulation data, we suggest that the bleach near 813-825 nm in transient HB spectra in the P(+)QM(-) state, often assigned to the upper exciton component of the special pair, is mostly due to different electrochromic shifts of the BL/M cofactors. From the exciton compositions in the charge-neutral (CN) bRC, the weak fourth excitonic band near 780 nm can be denoted PY+, that is, the upper excitonic band of the special pair, which in the CN bRC behaves as a delocalized state over PM and PL pigments that weakly mixes with accessory BChls. Thus, the shoulder in the absorption of Rb. sphaeroides near 813-815 nm does not contain the PY+ exciton band.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017

Role of Bath Fluctuations in the Double-Excitation Manifold in Shaping the 2DES of Bacterial Reaction Centers at Low Temperature

Olga Rancova; Ryszard Jankowiak; Darius Abramavicius

Spectroscopically relevant properties in photosynthetic reaction centers change during charge separation. In this paper, we focus on incorporation of the complete set of environmental fluctuations in the modeling of the nonlinear spectra of molecular aggregates. The model is applied in simulations of two-dimensional electronic spectra of a photosynthetic reaction center at low temperature (5 K), where spectral lines are narrow, such that more features can be resolved. We show that vertical cross sections of the simulated two-dimensional spectra (with all populations in the lowest excited state) reveal transient hole-burned spectra excited resonantly within the B band in agreement with experiment, thus providing new insight into environmental fluctuation parameters of Rhodobacter sphaeroides at low temperatures. Correlated fluctuations of molecular parameters are found to be necessary to describe charge separated configurations of molecular excited states.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016

Mutation-Induced Changes in the Protein Environment and Site Energies in the (M)L214G Mutant of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides Bacterial Reaction Center

Ryszard Jankowiak; Olga Rancova; Jinhai Chen; Adam Kell; Rafael G. Saer; J. Thomas Beatty; Darius Abramavicius

This work focuses on the low-temperature (5 K) photochemical (transient) hole-burned (HB) spectra within the P870 absorption band, and their theoretical analysis, for the (M)L214G mutant of the photosynthetic Rhodobacter sphaeroides bacterial reaction center (bRC). To provide insight into system-bath interactions of the bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) special pair, i.e., P870, in the mutated bRC, the optical line shape function for the P870 band is calculated numerically. On the basis of the modeling studies, we demonstrate that (M)L214G mutation leads to a heterogeneous population of bRCs with modified (increased) total electron-phonon coupling strength of the special pair BChl a and larger inhomogeneous broadening. Specifically, we show that after mutation in the (M)L214G bRC a large fraction (∼50%) of the bacteriopheophytin (HA) chromophores shifts red and the 800 nm absorption band broadens, while the remaining fraction of HA cofactors retains nearly the same site energy as HA in the wild-type bRC. Modeling using these two subpopulations allowed for fits of the absorption and nonresonant (transient) HB spectra of the mutant bRC in the charge neutral, oxidized, and charge-separated states using the Frenkel exciton Hamiltonian, providing new insight into the mutants complex electronic structure. Although the average (M)L214G mutant quantum efficiency of P(+)QA(-) state formation seems to be altered in comparison with the wild-type bRC, the average electron transfer time (measured via resonant transient HB spectra within the P870 band) was not affected. Thus, mutation in the vicinity of the electron acceptor (HA) does not tune the charge separation dynamics. Finally, quenching of the (M)L214G mutant excited states by P(+) is addressed by persistent HB spectra burned within the B band in chemically oxidized samples.


Physical Review E | 2012

Dimensional transitions in small Yukawa clusters

Arūnas Radzvilavičius; Olga Rancova; Egidijus Anisimovas

We provide a detailed analysis of structural transitions leading to rapid changes in the dimensionality of small Yukawa clusters. These transformations are induced by variations in the shape of confinement as well as the screening strength. We show that even in the most primitive systems composed of only a few strongly interacting particles, the order parameter exhibits a power-law behavior in the vicinity of the critical point of the continuous transition. The critical exponent γ = 1/2 is found to be universal in all studied cases, which is consistent with the general theory of continuous phase transitions.


Computer Physics Communications | 2011

Numerical modeling of structural transitions in few-particle confined 2D systems

Olga Rancova; Egidijus Anisimovas; Tadas Varanavičius

Abstract We study classical strongly correlated few-particle systems in two-dimensional traps. Strong interaction between the particles leads to formation of ordered structure (the Wigner crystal), and the precise configuration of particles is determined by the shape of the confinement. Structural transitions in systems of four to seven particles induced by compression of the confining trap in one of two lateral directions are modeled numerically using the statistical Monte Carlo technique and distributed (grid) computing. We focus on the dependence of the specific heat on the eccentricity of the confinement, and show that rapid variations of the specific heat can be used to detect and classify changes of system configuration. These structural transitions are the finite-size analogues of phase transitions commonly defined for infinite systems.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Polaronic effects at finite temperatures in the B850 ring of the LH2 complex

Vladimir Chorošajev; Olga Rancova; Darius Abramavicius

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Adam Kell

Kansas State University

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