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Single-photon absorption and emission from a natural photosynthetic complex.

Quanwei LiKaydren OrcuttRobert L CookJavier Sabines-ChesterkingAshley L TongGabriela S Schlau-CohenXiang ZhangGraham R FlemingK Birgitta Whaley
Published in: Nature (2023)
Photosynthesis is generally assumed to be initiated by a single photon 1-3 from the Sun, which, as a weak light source, delivers at most a few tens of photons per nanometre squared per second within a chlorophyll absorption band 1 . Yet much experimental and theoretical work over the past 40 years has explored the events during photosynthesis subsequent to absorption of light from intense, ultrashort laser pulses 2-15 . Here, we use single photons to excite under ambient conditions the light-harvesting 2 (LH2) complex of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, comprising B800 and B850 rings that contain 9 and 18 bacteriochlorophyll molecules, respectively. Excitation of the B800 ring leads to electronic energy transfer to the B850 ring in approximately 0.7 ps, followed by rapid B850-to-B850 energy transfer on an approximately 100-fs timescale and light emission at 850-875 nm (refs. 16-19 ). Using a heralded single-photon source 20,21 along with coincidence counting, we establish time correlation functions for B800 excitation and B850 fluorescence emission and demonstrate that both events involve single photons. We also find that the probability distribution of the number of heralds per detected fluorescence photon supports the view that a single photon can upon absorption drive the subsequent energy transfer and fluorescence emission and hence, by extension, the primary charge separation of photosynthesis. An analytical stochastic model and a Monte Carlo numerical model capture the data, further confirming that absorption of single photons is correlated with emission of single photons in a natural light-harvesting complex.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • monte carlo
  • mass spectrometry
  • living cells
  • sensitive detection
  • high resolution