Photosynthetic organisms flourish under low light intensities by converting photoenergy to chemical energy with near unity quantum efficiency and under high light intensities by safely dissipating excess photoenergy and deleterious photoproducts. The molecular mechanisms balancing these two functions remain incompletely described. One critical barrier to characterizing the mechanisms responsible for these processes is that they occur within proteins whose excited-state properties vary drastically among individual proteins and even within a single protein over time. In ensemble measurements, these excited-state properties appear only as the average value. To overcome this averaging, we investigate the purple bacterial antenna protein light harvesting complex 2 (LH2) from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila at the single-protein level. We use a room-temperature, single-molecule technique, the antiBrownian electrokinetic trap, to study LH2 in a solution-phase (nonperturbative) environment. By performing simultaneous measurements of fluorescence intensity, lifetime, and spectra of single LH2 complexes, we identify three distinct states and observe transitions occurring among them on a timescale of seconds. Our results reveal that LH2 complexes undergo photoactivated switching to a quenched state, likely by a conformational change, and thermally revert to the ground state. This is a previously unobserved, reversible quenching pathway, and is one mechanism through which photosynthetic organisms can adapt to changes in light intensities.photosynthesis | purple bacteria | fluorescence spectroscopy I n photosynthetic light harvesting, networks of antenna pigmentprotein complexes (PPCs) absorb sunlight, then efficiently transport the excitation through these networks to the reaction center, a PPC dedicated to charge separation (1, 2). Photosynthetic systems can complete this process both with near unity quantum efficiency and also function at light levels that provide photoenergy in excess of the capacity of downstream photochemistry. This is accomplished through mechanisms that dissipate harmful by-products produced by unused photoenergy (2, 3). The absorption, energy transport, and dissipation properties are governed by the balance of pigment-pigment and pigment-protein couplings (4). However, the molecular machinery responsible for this balance, and for the couplings themselves, is still poorly understood. This is because the couplings are highly sensitive to intermolecular distances. As a result of this sensitivity, the light-harvesting properties vary drastically among individual PPCs, because of small differences in protein conformation, and vary drastically even within a single PPC over time, because of protein fluctuations (2). In ensemble measurements, these drastic variations appear solely as a static, average value. Therefore, only through single-molecule spectroscopy can we investigate the photodynamics of individual PPCs, specifically how the absorption, energy transport, and dissipation of each change with time. We ...