Photosynthetic Light-Harvesting Is Tuned by the Heterogeneous Polarizable Environment of the Protein

TitlePhotosynthetic Light-Harvesting Is Tuned by the Heterogeneous Polarizable Environment of the Protein
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsCurutchet, C, Kongsted J, Munoz-Losa A, Hossein-Nejad H, Scholes GD, Mennucci B
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume133
Issue9
Pagination3078 - 3084
Date Published2011
ISBN Number0002-7863
Keywordscoherence, electronic-energy transfer, force-field, model, molecular-dynamics, phycoerythrin, resolution, spectroscopy, systems, temperature
AbstractIn photosynthesis, special antenna proteins that contain multiple light-absorbing molecules (chromo-phores) are able to capture sunlight and transfer the excitation energy to reaction centers with almost 100% quantum efficiencies. The critical role of the protein scaffold in holding the appropriate arrangement of the chromophores is well established and can be intuitively understood given the need to keep optimal dipole-dipole interactions between the energy-transferring chromophores, as described by Forster theory more than 60 years ago. However, the question whether the protein structure can also play an active role by tuning such dipole-dipole interactions has not been answered so far, its effect being rather crudely described by simple screening factors related to the refractive index properties of the system. Here, we present a combined quantum chemical/molecular mechanical approach to compute electronic couplings that accounts for the heterogeneous dielectric nature of the protein-solvent environment in atomic detail. We apply the method to study the effect of dielectric heterogeneity in the energy Migration properties of the PE545 principal light-harvesting antenna of the cryptomonad Rhodomonas CS24. We find that dielectric heterogeneity can profoundly tune by a factor up to similar to 4 the energy migration rates between chromophore sites compared to the average continuum dielectric view that has historically been assumed. Our results indicate that engineering of the local dielectric environment can potentially be used to optimize artificial light-harvesting antenna systems.