Photosystems I and II convert solar energy into the chemical energy that powers life. Chlorophyll a photochemistry, using red light (680 to 700 nm), is near universal and is considered to define the energy "red limit" of oxygenic photosynthesis. We present biophysical studies on the photosystems from a cyanobacterium grown in far-red light (750 nm). The few long-wavelength chlorophylls present are well resolved from each other and from the majority pigment, chlorophyll a. Charge separation in photosystem I and II uses chlorophyll f at 745 nm and chlorophyll f (or d) at 727 nm, respectively. Each photosystem has a few even longer-wavelength chlorophylls f that collect light and pass excitation energy uphill to the photochemically active pigments. These photosystems function beyond the red limit using far-red pigments in only a few key positions. 2017 © The Authors

Photochemistry beyond the red limit in chlorophyll f-containing photosystems

Santabarbara S;
2018-01-01

Abstract

Photosystems I and II convert solar energy into the chemical energy that powers life. Chlorophyll a photochemistry, using red light (680 to 700 nm), is near universal and is considered to define the energy "red limit" of oxygenic photosynthesis. We present biophysical studies on the photosystems from a cyanobacterium grown in far-red light (750 nm). The few long-wavelength chlorophylls present are well resolved from each other and from the majority pigment, chlorophyll a. Charge separation in photosystem I and II uses chlorophyll f at 745 nm and chlorophyll f (or d) at 727 nm, respectively. Each photosystem has a few even longer-wavelength chlorophylls f that collect light and pass excitation energy uphill to the photochemically active pigments. These photosystems function beyond the red limit using far-red pigments in only a few key positions. 2017 © The Authors
2018
Istituto di Biofisica - IBF
chlorophyll
chlorophyll a
chlorophyll f
thylakoid membrane protein
unclassified drug
chlorophyll
chlorophyll a
chlorophyll f
biophysics
chlorophyll
cyanobacterium
light intensity
photochemistry
photosynthesis
pigment
separation
wavelength
Acaryochloris
Article
chemical structure
Chroococcidiopsis thermalis
cyanobacterium
excitation
far red light
nonhuman
photochemistry
photosynthesis
photosystem I
photosystem II
pigmentation
priority journal
solar energy
spectral sensitivity
thermoluminescence
analogs and derivatives
chemistry
growth
development and aging
light
metabolism
photosynthesis
radiation response
Chlorophyll
Cyanobacteria
Light
Photosynthesis
Photosystem I Protein Complex
Photosystem II Protein Complex
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/411603
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