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The development and applications of multidimensional biomolecular spectroscopy illustrated by photosynthetic light harvesting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2024

Graham R. Fleming*
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry and QB3 Institute, Kavli Energy Nanoscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA Molecular Biophysics and Integrated Bioimaging Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Gregory D. Scholes
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA
*
Corresponding author: Graham R. Fleming; Email: grfleming@lbl.gov
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Abstract

The parallel and synergistic developments of atomic resolution structural information, new spectroscopic methods, their underpinning formalism, and the application of sophisticated theoretical methods have led to a step function change in our understanding of photosynthetic light harvesting, the process by which photosynthetic organisms collect solar energy and supply it to their reaction centers to initiate the chemistry of photosynthesis. The new spectroscopic methods, in particular multidimensional spectroscopies, have enabled a transition from recording rates of processes to focusing on mechanism. We discuss two ultrafast spectroscopies – two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy and two-dimensional electronic-vibrational spectroscopy – and illustrate their development through the lens of photosynthetic light harvesting. Both spectroscopies provide enhanced spectral resolution and, in different ways, reveal pathways of energy flow and coherent oscillations which relate to the quantum mechanical mixing of, for example, electronic excitations (excitons) and nuclear motions. The new types of information present in these spectra provoked the application of sophisticated quantum dynamical theories to describe the temporal evolution of the spectra and provide new questions for experimental investigation. While multidimensional spectroscopies have applications in many other areas of science, we feel that the investigation of photosynthetic light harvesting has had the largest influence on the development of spectroscopic and theoretical methods for the study of quantum dynamics in biology, hence the focus of this review. We conclude with key questions for the next decade of this review.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
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© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. (a) An image (Sturgis et al. 2009) of the light-harvesting complexes embedded in the photosynthetic membrane from the purple bacterium Rb. sphaeroides. An LH1-reaction center dimer complex is circled in red, an LH2 complex is circled in green. Copyright 2009 American Chemical Society. (b) Schematic of neighboring LH2 and LH1 complexes that shows the timescales of light-harvesting pathways (Fleming and van Grondelle 1997). Reprinted with permission from Elsevier.

Figure 1

Figure 2. (a) Structural model of LH2 showing the two rings of BChl chromophores, B800 (blue) and B850 (red). (b) Disorder in the site energies of chromophores in the B850 band change the exciton density of states, causing the excitons to be less delocalized. Adapted with permission from (Scholes et al. 1999) copyright 1999 American Chemical Society.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Calculations of electronic (Coulombic) couplings between BChl a molecules in LH2 using the TDC method (VTDC) compared to estimations based on the dipole approximation (Vdd). Adapted from (Krueger et al. 1998), copyright 1998 American Chemical Society.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Light harvesting complexes. Variation in light-harvesting antennae commonly encountered in photosynthetic organisms, which vary widely in their protein structure and the number and arrangement of pigments utilized. The molecular structures (with parent organisms in brackets) from left to right are: peridinin chlorophyll protein or PCP (of Amphidinium carterae), phycoerythrin 545 (of Rhodomonas CS24), light harvesting complex LHCII (of Spinacia olearia), schematic representation of a chlorosome (of Chloroflexus aurantiacus), and light harvesting complex LH2 (of Rhodopseudomonas acidophila). Their respective absorption spectra, shown in matching colours, illustrate how different organisms have evolved to optimize their light-harvesting capabilities in different regions of the visible spectrum. Figure adapted with permission from (Scholes et al. 2012), copyright 2012 Royal Society of Chemistry.

Figure 4

Figure 5. (a) Schematic representation of a 2DES experimental setup. (b) Spatial distribution of molecules of interest in the ground (back) and an excited (red) states, where t0 is the moment that the second pump (p2) pulse reaches the sample. (c) The nonlinear response of the sample (top) and the four interacting pulses (bottom). Reprinted with permission from (S Biswas et al. 2022), copyright 2022 American Chemical Society.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Overview of the various 2DES experiments and data representations. The data are for the PC645 light-harvesting complex. Adapted from (Dean and Scholes 2017; Turner et al. 2012), copyright 2017 American Chemical Society and copyright 2012 Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain), respectively.

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Figure 7. The principle of 2D correlation spectroscopy for detecting donor-acceptor spectral correlations. (a) Segments of excitation energy trajectories for two independent chromophores, the corresponding ensemble free energy curves, and simulated 2DES correlation in the rephasing cross-peak spectrum. (b) Similar to (a) except that the two chromophores are electronically coupled. The red line indicates that the eigenstate has more amplitude of excitation on the donor chromophore than on the acceptor, and vice versa for the black line. Reprinted from (Wong et al. 2012), copyright 2012 Springer Nature Limited.

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Figure 8. (a) The structural arrangement of the seven BChl molecules in the FMO structure is overlaid with shadings that indicate the delocalization patterns of the different excitons. (b) Two main photoexcitation transfer pathways were indicated by the experiments, shown by red and green arrows. (c) Experimental 2DES spectra (Brixner et al. 2005) (real parts) of the FMO complex from Chlorobium tepidum at 77 K. Reprinted from (Brixner et al. 2005) with permission, copyright 2005: Macmillan Magazines Ltd. (d) A series of two-dimensional spectra of FMO taken at increasing values of population time, T. The spectra show the real (absorptive) part of the signal from both rephasing and non-rephasing response pathways. The color and contours lines are scaled linearly. Black contour lines correspond to positive features and white contour lines to negative features. Reprinted from (Hayes and Engel 2012), copyright 2012 The Royal Society.

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Figure 9. (a) Chl arrangement in LHCII trimer with Chl a and Chl b shown in green and blue, respectively. The phytyl chains have been omitted for clarity. (b) Linear absorption spectrum of LHCII trimers at 77 K. Red sticks indicate the exciton energies determined in this experiment, while black sticks are previously predicted values. (c) Power spectra of quantum beating in LHCII constructed from experimental 2DES data. Reprinted from (Calhoun et al. 2009) with permission. Copyright 2009 American Chemical Society.

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Figure 10. (a) Experimental real 2D relaxation (left) and nonrephasing (right) spectra of LHCII at 77 K for population times of 30, 70, 200, 300 fs, and 13 ps. Arrows point to cross-peaks on the nonrephasing spectra to highlight energy transfer dynamics. (b) Summary of the pathways of energy flow. The time scales indicate the approximate time at which the cross-peak signal corresponding to that pathway reaches its maximum. (c) Mapping of the energy flow pathways and exciton states onto the LHCII structure. Reprinted with permission from (Schlau-Cohen et al. 2009). Copyright 2009 American Chemical Society.

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Figure 11. (a) Selected two-dimensional electronic spectra of the FMO complex are shown at population times from T = 0 to 600 fs demonstrating the emergence of the exciton 1–3 cross-peak (white arrows), amplitude oscillation of the exciton 1 diagonal peak (black arrows), the change in lowest-energy exciton peak shape and the oscillation of the 1–3 cross-peak amplitude. The data (Engel et al. 2007) are shown with an arcsinh coloration to highlight smaller features: amplitude increases from blue to white. Reprinted from (Engel et al. 2007) with permission. Copyright 2007 Springer Nature Limited. (b) Model calculations showing how, for an electronic coherence between two levels, 2DES exhibits oscillations on the cross-peaks of rephasing spectra and diagonal peaks of non-rephasing spectra. Reprinted with permission from (Branczyk et al. 2014). Copyright 2014 John Wiley and Sons.

Figure 11

Figure 12. (a) Crystal structure of the PC645 LHC described in this work. The structure shows the different types of bound bilin chromophropes that we refer to in the text, specifically DBV (green) and PCB (red). (b) Depiction of a 2DES spectrum (298K) overlaid with the absorption spectrum of PC645 to emphasize how the spectral bands are resolved in the correlation map. (c) Example of a double-sided Feynman diagram that produces cross-peak oscillations.

Figure 12

Figure 13. (a) Real part of the total 2DES signal for PC645 (ambient temperature) for several pump-probe delay times. Reproduced from (Turner et al. 2012) with permsission. Copyright 2012 Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain). The cross-peak being analyzed is indicated by the dashed lines. (b) Oscillations in the cross-peak. Reproduced from (Turner et al. 2011) with permission. Copyright the American Chemical Society 2011.

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Figure 14. (a) Absorption spectra (77K) of the wild-type FMO complex, with wavelengths of the prominent bands (excitons 1, 2, 4) labeled. Analysis of broad-band pump-probe data reveals the coherent oscillations detected in the 2DES experiments, the coherence at 190 cm−1, as well as a coherence at 155 cm−1. (b) Mutant FMO complexes were prepared by mutagenesis of amino acids that affect absorption involving site 3 and site 6 BChls. Adapted from (Maiuri et al. 2018) with permission. Copyright Springer Nature Limited.

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Figure 15. (a) Crystal structure of PC645 with the chromophores studied in these experiments labeled. (b) Model calculations of the vibronic exciton levels formed from mixing the 1,580 cm–1 vibrational coherence of PCB and the and DBV band. (c) 2DES data (77K) showing the oscillating cross-peak that indicates correlations between the DBV and PCB absorption bands. (d) Beat maps of the rephasing and non-rephasing 2DES data. Reproduced from (Dean et al. 2016) with permission. Copyright 2016 Elsevier.

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Figure 16. The four third-order two-dimensional spectroscopies covering the vibrational and electronic excitation frequency ranges.

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Figure 17. The electronic absorption spectrum and 2DEV spectra of the LHCII complex in the Qy and Qx regions. The laser spectrum for the Qx region is also shown. Blue peaks represent excited state absorption and red peaks represent ground state bleaching. Adapted with permission from (Arsenault et al. 2020a).

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Figure 18. (a) 2DEV spectral resolution. (b) With the resolution along the excitation axis, we can perform global analysis at each individual excitation frequency with a simple sequential model. The vibrational structure in the EADS and the time constants will allow us to understand the spatial flow and kinetic nature of pathways. Reproduced with permission from (Yang et al. 2022). Copyright 2022 Europe PMC.

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Figure 19. (a) Energy level diagram for the six excitonic states of the heterodimer model, where the ground state manifold has been omitted for clarity. b) and c) 2DEV spectra for the model at different waiting times. Positive features indicate ground state bleaches and negative features indicate excited state absorptions (ESAs). The two ESA quartets have been labeled as C, E, C′, and E′ and as D, F, D′, and F′. The two bands along the excitation axis have been marked by dashed-dotted black lines and labeled by the excitonic state that they originate from (A and B). The $ \left|\left.\mathrm{B}\right\rangle \right. $-$ \left|\left.\mathrm{A}\right\rangle \right. $ energy gap has also been labeled. d) and f) Center line slope dynamics along the excitation axis (CLSexc.) of certain features, colored according to the peak labels in the top right corner of each plot. e) Magnitude of the cross-power spectrum of the CLSs of features C′ and C, where the oscillatory frequency of 245 cm−1 is marked by a dotted black line (a peak in the cross-power spectrum indicates a shared frequency). g) Intensity beat map along the excitation axis of features C′ and C, where the oscillatory frequency of 245 cm−1 is marked by a dotted black line and the involved excitation frequencies are labeled and marked by black dotted-dashed lines. Reproduced from (Arsenault et al. 2020b) with permission (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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Figure 20. Two-dimensional electronic-vibrational spectra of LHCII at 77 K. a)–d) 2DEV spectra of LHCII at waiting times of T = 50, 160, 430, and 690 fs, respectively. The intensities of all spectra have been normalized to T = 0 fs. Red features outlined in solid contour lines indicate ground state bleaches and blue features outlined in dotted contour lines indicate excited state absorptions (ESAs). In b), ESA features of interest have been labeled, as well as the central locations of the predominantly Chl a excitonic band (red vertical line), predominantly Chl b excitonic band (blue vertical line), and higher-lying vibronic bands (purple vertical lines). e) Origins of peaks one through eight. Reproduced from (Arsenault et al. 2020b) with permission (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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Figure 21. The Chl positions in an LHCII trimer along with the excitonic energy levels (center), and the cross-power spectrum between peaks labeled 7 and 8 (upper right) and the power spectra along the excitation axis at 1590 cm−1 (the detection frequency of features 7 and 8) (lower right). The horizontal lines indicate the excitons connected by the specific beat frequency highlighted (650 cm−1). Reproduced from (Arsenault et al. 2020b) with permission (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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Figure 22. 2DEV experiment and simulations show that initially energy flows towards the peripheral antennae for Chl a excitation (left) and towards the PSII core for Chl b excitation (right). The bidirectional energy flow is crucial for balancing light-harvesting efficiency and photoprotection. Purple colors in the lifetime density maps indicate decays, green colors indicate growths. Adapted from Leonardo et al 2024 with permission. Copyright 2024 American Chemical Society.