rates, this technique in its many facets provides insight into various processes such as energy transfer, electron transfer, excited state reactions, molecular rearrangements, plasmonic interactions, and complex formation [1]. These are undoubtedly the key effects determining the properties of materials at the nanoscale, which can lead to changes in fluorescence intensity. While enhancement of fluorescence intensity can be most frequently induced by coupling fluorophores with metallic nanoparticles [2], either through absorption or fluorescence rate increase, fluorescence quenching is often the result of energy transfer to neighbouring acceptors. If these acceptors can emit fluorescence, the energy transfer leads to an increase of acceptor fluorescence intensity [1]; its fluorescence dynamics can also be affected. Alternatively, in the case of non-emitting acceptors, the energy is dissipated non-radiatively, predominantly as heat. Such a scenario appears in hybrid nanostructures that involve metallic nanoparticles [3] or carbon-based materials [4][5][6][7]. Following the first reports on obtaining graphene [8,9], a two-dimensional honeycomb carbon lattice known for its unique optoelectronic, thermal, and mechanical properties, several groups have applied this material as an acceptor in studying fluorescence of emitters placed in its vicinity [10][11][12][13]. The results indicate that incorporating graphene in such structures provides unexplored opportunities in devising novel architectures possibly applicable in photonics, optoelectronics, and biosensing [12][13][14][15].In addition to graphene, other carbon-based compounds, namely graphene oxide (GO) and reduced graphene oxide (rGO), have been suggested as components of functional hybrid nanostructures. At first, they were considered disadvantageous, described often as distorted forms of highly crystalline graphene. Nevertheless, easy processing, solubility in various solvents, e.g. water, and the presence of oxygen containing functional groups [16], mean both GO and rGO are attractive materials for coupling them with other nanostructures. Particularly Abstract: Herein, we describe the results of fluorescence microscopy imaging of peridinin-chlorophyll-protein (PCP) photosynthetic complex mixed with reduced graphene oxide (rGO). Upon incorporation of rGO the fluorescence image of PCP changes substantially from one characterized by uniform intensity towards a more complex pattern. The isolated bright spots feature up to ten times higher emission intensity compared to the fluorescence of PCP in the reference sample, where no rGO was added. The number of the bright spots increases with increasing rGO concentration. At the same time the fluorescence intensity away from the bright spots in the PCP/rGO hybrid system is quenched in comparison to the PCP -only reference.