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A leap in quantum efficiency through light harvesting in photoreceptor UVR8.

Xiankun LiHaisheng RenMainak KunduZheyun LiuFrank W ZhongLijuan WangJiali GaoDongping Zhong
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Plants utilize a UV-B (280 to 315 nm) photoreceptor UVR8 (UV RESISTANCE LOCUS 8) to sense environmental UV levels and regulate gene expression to avoid harmful UV effects. Uniquely, UVR8 uses intrinsic tryptophan for UV-B perception with a homodimer structure containing 26 structural tryptophan residues. However, besides 8 tryptophans at the dimer interface to form two critical pyramid perception centers, the other 18 tryptophans' functional role is unknown. Here, using ultrafast fluorescence spectroscopy, computational methods and extensive mutations, we find that all 18 tryptophans form light-harvesting networks and funnel their excitation energy to the pyramid centers to enhance light-perception efficiency. We determine the timescales of all elementary tryptophan-to-tryptophan energy-transfer steps in picoseconds to nanoseconds, in excellent agreement with quantum computational calculations, and finally reveal a significant leap in light-perception quantum efficiency from 35% to 73%. This photoreceptor is the first system discovered so far, to be best of our knowledge, using natural amino-acid tryptophans to form networks for both light harvesting and light perception.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • gene expression
  • molecular dynamics
  • amino acid
  • dna methylation
  • photodynamic therapy
  • high resolution
  • density functional theory
  • mass spectrometry
  • aqueous solution
  • climate change