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Unveiling Long-Range Forces in Light Harvesting Proteins: Pivotal Roles of Temperature and Light ![]() Auteur(s): Perez-Martin Elsa, Beranger Tristan, Bonnet L., Teppe F., Lisauskas Alvydas, Ikamas Ketsukis, Vrouwe Elwin, Floriani Elena, Katona Gergely, Marguet Didier, Calandrini Vania, Pettini Marco, Ruffenach S., Torres Jeremie
(Document sans référence bibliographique) 2024-00-00Texte intégral en Openaccess : Ref HAL: hal-04828945_v1 Ref Arxiv: 2411.07307 Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS Exporter : BibTex | endNote Résumé: Electrodynamic interactions between biomolecules are of potential biological interest for signaling warranting investigation of their activation through various mechanisms in living systems. Here, using as model system a light harvesting protein within the phycobilisome antenna system of red algae, we proved that not only light exposure but also thermal energy alone can trigger attractive electrodynamic interactions up to hundreds of nanometer. The latter are sustained by low frequency collective modes and while the second mode appears only upon illumination, the fundamental one can be activated by temperature alone. Activation of such collective modes and ED interactions might influence conformational rearrangements and energy transport within the phycobilisome antenna system. This is a paradigm-shift that underscores the immense potential of biological systems in exploiting different forms of input energy to achieve optimal energy transfer. |