The Primary Steps of Photosynthesis
- 1 February 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Physics Today
- Vol. 47 (2), 48-55
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.881413
Abstract
Photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert solar energy into chemical energy, results in about 10 billion tons of carbon entering the biosphere annually as carbohydrate—equivalent to about eight times mankind's energy consumption in 1990. The apparatus used by plants to perform this conversion is both complex and highly efficient. Two initial steps of photosynthesis—energy transfer and electron transfer—are essential to its efficiency: Molecules of the light‐harvesting system transfer electronic excitation energy to special chlorophyll molecules, whose role is to initiate the directional transfer of electrons across a biological membrane; the electron transfer, which takes place in a pigment‐protein complex called the reaction center, then creates a potential difference that drives the subsequent biochemical reactions that store the energy. (Higher plants use two different reaction centers, called photosystems I and II, while purple bacteria make do with a single reaction center. The difference is that the bacteria do not generate oxygen in the photosynthetic process.) Both the elementary energy transfer and the primary electron transfer are ultrafast (occurring between and seconds), leading to the trapping of excitation energy at the reaction center (on a 100‐picosecond timescale) and subsequent electron transfer in about 3 picoseconds with almost 100% quantum yield.
Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Primary charge separation in mutant reaction centers of Rhodobacter capsulatusThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1993
- Virtual transitions in nonadiabatic condensed-phase reactionsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1993
- Three-dimensional structure of system I of photosynthesis at 6 Å resolutionNature, 1993
- Application of a multilevel Redfield theory to electron transfer in condensed phasesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1992
- On the mechanism of the primary charge separation in bacterial photosynthesisBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics, 1991
- An assessment of the mechanism of initial electron transfer in bacterial reaction centersBiochemistry, 1991
- Excited-state structure and energy-transfer dynamics of the bacteriochlorophyll a antenna complex from Prosthecochloris aestuariiThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1991
- Excitation-energy transport in the bacteriochlorophyll antenna systems of Rhodospirillum rubrum and Rhodobacter sphaeroides, studied by low-intensity picosecond absorption spectroscopyBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics, 1986
- Kinetics of picosecond bacteriochlorophyll luminescence in vivo as a function of the reaction center stateBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics, 1985
- Trapping, loss and annihilation of excitations in a photosynthetic systemBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics, 1983