Replacement of the central Mg in chlorophylls by Ni opens an ultrafast (tens of femtoseconds time range) radiationless de-excitation path, while the principal ground-state absorption and coordination properties of the pigment are retained. A method has been developed for substituting the native bacteriochlorophyll a by Ni-bacteriochlorophyll a ([Ni]-BChl) in the light harvesting antenna of the core complex (LH1) from the purple bacterium, Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides, to investigate its unit size and excited state properties. The components of the complex have been extracted with an organic solvent from freeze-dried membranes of an LH1-only strain of Rb. sphaeroides and transferred into the micelles of n-octyl-beta-glucopyranoside (OG). Reconstitution was achieved by solubilization in 3.4% OG, followed by dilution, yielding a complex nearly identical to the native one, in terms of absorption, fluorescence, and circular dichroism spectra as well as energy transfer efficiency from carotenoid to bacteriochlorophyll. By adding increasing amounts of [Ni]-BChl to the reconstitution mixture, a series of LH1 complexes was obtained that contain increasing levels of this efficient excitation trap. In contrast to the nearly unchanged absorption, the presence of [Ni]-BChl in LH1 markedly affects the emission properties. Incorporation of only 3.2 and 20% [Ni]-BChl reduces the emission by 50% and nearly 100%, respectively. The subnanosecond fluorescence kinetics of the complexes were monoexponential, with the lifetime identical to that of the native complex, and its amplitude decreasing in parallel with the steady-state fluorescence yield. Quantitative analysis of the data, based on a Poisson distribution of the modified pigment in the reconstituted complex, suggests that the presence of a single excitation trap per LH1 unit suffices for efficient emission quenching and that this unit contains 20 +/- 1 BChl molecules.
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