Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Jankowiak R" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 High-Resolution Frequency-Domain Spectroscopic and Modeling Studies of Photosystem I (PSI), PSI Mutants and PSI Supercomplexes Zazubovich V; Jankowiak R; 38612659
PHYSICS
2 Frequency-Domain Spectroscopic Study of the Photosystem I Supercomplexes, Isolated IsiA Monomers, and the Intact IsiA Ring Reinot T; Khmelnitskiy A; Zazubovich V; Toporik H; Mazor Y; Jankowiak R; 36065077
PHYSICS
3 How Well Does the Hole-Burning Action Spectrum Represent the Site-Distribution Function of the Lowest-Energy State in Photosynthetic Pigment-Protein Complexes? Zazubovich V, Jankowiak R 31265294
CHEMISTRY
4 Low-temperature protein dynamics of the B800 molecules in the LH2 light-harvesting complex: spectral hole burning study and comparison with single photosynthetic complex spectroscopy. Grozdanov D, Herascu N, Reinot T, Jankowiak R, Zazubovich V 20166717
PHYSICS
5 Effects of the distributions of energy or charge transfer rates on spectral hole burning in pigment-protein complexes at low temperatures. Herascu N, Ahmouda S, Picorel R, Seibert M, Jankowiak R, Zazubovich V 22046956
PHYSICS
6 Spectral hole burning, recovery, and thermocycling in chlorophyll-protein complexes: distributions of barriers on the protein energy landscape. Najafi M, Herascu N, Seibert M, Picorel R, Jankowiak R, Zazubovich V 22957798
PHYSICS
7 Modeling of various optical spectra in the presence of slow excitation energy transfer in dimers and trimers with weak interpigment coupling: FMO as an example. Herascu N, Kell A, Acharya K, Jankowiak R, Blankenship RE, Zazubovich V 24506338
PHYSICS
8 On the Controversial Nature of the 825 nm Exciton Band in the FMO Protein Complex. Kell A, Acharya K, Zazubovich V, Jankowiak R 26269993
PHYSICS
9 On the Conflicting Estimations of Pigment Site Energies in Photosynthetic Complexes: A Case Study of the CP47 Complex. Reinot T, Chen J, Kell A, Jassas M, Robben KC, Zazubovich V, Jankowiak R 27279733
PHYSICS

 

Title:How Well Does the Hole-Burning Action Spectrum Represent the Site-Distribution Function of the Lowest-Energy State in Photosynthetic Pigment-Protein Complexes?
Authors:Zazubovich VJankowiak R
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31265294?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b03806
Publication:The journal of physical chemistry. B
Keywords:
PMID:31265294 Category:J Phys Chem B Date Added:2019-07-03
Dept Affiliation: CHEMISTRY
1 Department of Physics , Concordia University , 7141 Sherbrooke Street West , Montreal H4B 1R6 , Quebec , Canada.
2 Department of Chemistry , Kansas State University , Manhattan , Kansas 66506 , United States.

Description:

How Well Does the Hole-Burning Action Spectrum Represent the Site-Distribution Function of the Lowest-Energy State in Photosynthetic Pigment-Protein Complexes?

J Phys Chem B. 2019 Jul 02;:

Authors: Zazubovich V, Jankowiak R

Abstract

For the first time, we combined Monte Carlo and nonphotochemical hole burning (NPHB) master equation approaches to allow for ultrahigh-resolution (<0.005 cm-1, smaller than the typical homogeneous line widths at 5 K) simulations of the NPHB spectra of dimers and trimers of interacting pigments. These simulations reveal significant differences between the zero-phonon hole (ZPH) action spectrum and the site-distribution function (SDF) of the lowest-energy state. The NPHB of the lowest-energy pigment, following the excitation energy transfer (EET) from the higher-energy pigments which are excited directly, results in the shifts of all excited states. These shifts affect the ZPH action spectra and EET times derived from the widths of the spectral holes burned in the donor-dominated regions. The effect is present for a broad variety of realistic antihole functions, and it is maximal at relatively low values of interpigment coupling ( V = 5 cm-1) where the use of the Förster approximation is justified. These findings need to be considered in interpreting various optical spectra of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes for which SDFs (describing the inhomogeneous broadening) are often obtained directly from the ZPH action spectra. Water-soluble chlorophyll-binding protein (WSCP) was considered as an example.

PMID: 31265294 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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