Published in

Elsevier, BBA - Bioenergetics, 4(1857), p. 427-442, 2016

DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2016.02.001

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Contribution of bacteriochlorophyll conformation to the distribution of site-energies in the FMO Protein

Journal article published in 2016 by Stuart A. MacGowan, Mathias O. Senge ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The structural data for the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) protein indicate that the bacteriochlorophylls (BChls) display a significant degree of conformational heterogeneity of their peripheral substituents and the protein-induced nonplanar skeletal deformations of the tetrapyrrole macrocycle. As electronic properties of chromophores are altered by such differences, a conformational effect may influence the site-energies of specific pigments and thus play a role in mediating the excitation energy transfer dynamics, but this has not yet been established. The difficulty of assessing this question is shown to be partly the result of the inability of the sequential truncation approach usually employed to account for interactions between the conformations of the macrocycle and its substituents and an alternative approach is suggested. By assigning the BChl atoms to meaningful atom groups and performing all possible permutations of partial optimizations in a full-factorial design, where each group is either frozen in the crystal geometry or optimized in vacuo, followed by excited state calculations on each resulting structure (PM6//ZIndo/S), the specific effects of the conformations of each BChl component as well as mutual interactions between the molecular fragments on the site-energy can be delineated. This factorial relaxation procedure gives different estimates of the macrocycle conformational perturbation than the approach of sequentially truncating the BChl periphery. The results were evaluated in the context of published site-energies for the FMO pigments from three species to identify how conformational effects contribute to their distribution and instances of cross-species conservation and functional divergence of the BChl nonplanarity conformational contribution are described.