Assessment of S* in the Orange Carotenoid Protein
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 01:12 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
S* is not required for photoconversion in the orange carotenoid protein.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
By comparison to the pump wavelength-dependence of the OCPo to OCPr conversion in buffer, we show that S* is not required for photoconversion, and that S* likely arises from ground-state heterogeneity within OCPo.
What carries the argument
Pump wavelength-dependent transient absorption in trehalose-sucrose glass films that trap initial photoproducts while blocking completion to OCPr.
If this is right
- Initial photoproducts form even at pump wavelengths where the S* signature is absent.
- The wavelength range that drives product formation in glass aligns with the range that drives full conversion in solution.
- S* is visible only for pumps shorter than 495 nm and therefore traces a subpopulation of OCPo rather than an obligatory intermediate.
- The photoconversion pathway can proceed from the excited-state manifold without passing through the long-lived S* state.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Measurements that separate subpopulations of OCPo could test whether specific ground-state conformers eliminate the S* signal while retaining conversion ability.
- The same glass-trapping approach may clarify whether S*-like signals in other carotenoid-binding proteins also reflect heterogeneity rather than required intermediates.
- If ground-state heterogeneity proves common, models of carotenoid photoprotection would need to incorporate multiple dark forms rather than a single uniform OCPo state.
Load-bearing premise
The trehalose-sucrose glass film prevents completion to OCPr while still permitting formation of initial OCP photoproducts.
What would settle it
If the wavelength dependence of initial photoproduct formation in the glass did not match the wavelength dependence of full OCPo-to-OCPr conversion efficiency in buffer, the conclusion that S* is unnecessary would not hold.
Figures
read the original abstract
The orange carotenoid protein (OCP) is the water-soluble mediator of non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria, a crucial photoprotective mechanism in response to excess illumination. OCP converts from a dark-adapted inactive state (OCPo) to an active quenching conformation (OCPr) under high-light conditions, resulting in a concomitant redshift in the absorption of the bound carotenoid. Here, we test whether a long-lived carotenoid singlet excited state (S*) is required for this photoconversion. We measured pump wavelength-dependent transient absorption of OCPo trapped in trehalose-sucrose glass films. We found that initial OCP photoproducts are still formed despite the glass preventing completion to OCPr, and that S* is only apparent for <495 nm pumps. By comparison to the pump wavelength-dependence of the OCPo to OCPr conversion in buffer, we show that S* is not required for photoconversion, and that S* likely arises from ground-state heterogeneity within OCPo.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that the long-lived carotenoid singlet excited state S* is not required for photoconversion of OCP from its inactive OCPo to active OCPr form. Pump wavelength-dependent transient absorption measurements on OCPo in trehalose-sucrose glass films show that initial photoproducts still form for excitation wavelengths >495 nm (where S* is absent), and this threshold matches the pump dependence of full OCPo to OCPr conversion measured in buffer; the authors conclude that S* likely originates from ground-state heterogeneity within OCPo.
Significance. If the central comparison holds, the result would be significant for carotenoid photophysics and photoprotection mechanisms in cyanobacteria, as it would indicate that photoconversion proceeds from the Franck-Condon region without needing the long-lived S* state and would redirect attention to ground-state conformational distributions. The use of a glass matrix to trap early intermediates while comparing wavelength dependences is a direct experimental test that strengthens the argument when matrix effects are controlled.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract and glass-film experiments description] The load-bearing assumption that the trehalose-sucrose glass prevents completion to OCPr while leaving the initial photoproduct pathways and ground-state heterogeneity unchanged (allowing direct comparison of wavelength thresholds to buffer data) is not supported by an explicit check that early-time (<200 fs) transient spectra or effective absorption cross-sections are matrix-independent. Without this, the absence of S* in glass for >495 nm pumps does not rigorously demonstrate that S* is dispensable in buffer.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for highlighting this important point regarding the glass-matrix experiments. We respond to the major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: The load-bearing assumption that the trehalose-sucrose glass prevents completion to OCPr while leaving the initial photoproduct pathways and ground-state heterogeneity unchanged (allowing direct comparison of wavelength thresholds to buffer data) is not supported by an explicit check that early-time (<200 fs) transient spectra or effective absorption cross-sections are matrix-independent. Without this, the absence of S* in glass for >495 nm pumps does not rigorously demonstrate that S* is dispensable in buffer.
Authors: We agree that an explicit side-by-side comparison of early-time (<200 fs) transient spectra (or absorption cross-sections) between the trehalose-sucrose glass and aqueous buffer would provide stronger support for the assumption that the glass leaves the initial photoproduct pathways and ground-state heterogeneity unaltered. The current manuscript relies on the observed match between the pump-wavelength threshold for photoproduct formation in glass and the threshold for full OCPo-to-OCPr conversion in buffer, together with the known ability of the glass to trap early intermediates. In the revised version we will add a dedicated paragraph (and, if space permits, a supplementary figure) that (i) cites literature on the matrix effects of trehalose-sucrose glasses on carotenoid photophysics and (ii) explicitly notes the lack of a direct <200 fs matrix-independence test as a limitation while arguing that the wavelength-threshold agreement still supports the central conclusion. We will also state that future work could include such a direct comparison. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; direct experimental comparison of wavelength dependences
full rationale
The paper reports transient absorption measurements of OCPo in trehalose-sucrose glass films as a function of pump wavelength, observes that initial photoproducts form for pumps >495 nm (where S* is absent), and directly compares this threshold to the pump-wavelength dependence of OCPo-to-OCPr conversion measured separately in buffer. No equations, fitted parameters, or derivations are present that reduce the conclusion to inputs by construction. No self-citations are invoked as load-bearing premises. The result follows from the observed experimental wavelength thresholds without renaming, ansatz smuggling, or uniqueness theorems.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Pump-wavelength dependence of transient absorption signals can be used to identify or rule out specific excited-state contributions.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
(2) Mullineaux, C. W. State Transitions: An Example of Acclimation to Low-Light Stress. J. Exp. Bot.2005,56, 389–393. (3) Kerfeld, C. A.; Sawaya, M. R.; Brahmandam, V.; Cascio, D.; Ho, K. K.; Trevithick- Sutton, C. C.; Krogmann, D. W.; Yeates, T. O. The Crystal Structure of a Cyanobac- terial Water-Soluble Carotenoid Binding Protein.Structure2003,11, 55–6...
work page 2005
-
[2]
(21) Lou, W.; Niedzwiedzki, D. M.; Jiang, R. J.; Blankenship, R. E.; Liu, H. Binding of Red Form of Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP) to Phycobilisome Is Not Sufficient for Quenching.Biochim. Biophys. Acta, Bioenerg.2020,1861, 148155. (22) Maksimov, E. G.; Li, W.-J.; Protasova, E. A.; Friedrich, T.; Ge, B.; Qin, S.; Sluchanko, N. N. Hybrid Coupling of R-phy...
work page 2020
-
[3]
(41) Maksimov, E. G.; Shirshin, E. A.; Sluchanko, N. N.; Zlenko, D. V.; Parshina, E. Y.; Tsoraev, G. V.; Klementiev, K. E.; Budylin, G. S.; Schmitt, F.-J.; Friedrich, T.; Fadeev, V. V.; Paschenko, V. Z.; Rubin, A. B. The Signaling State of Orange Carotenoid Protein.Biophys. J.2015,109, 595–607. (42) Maksimov, E. G.; Sluchanko, N. N.; Slonimskiy, Y. B.; Sl...
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2015
-
[4]
A.; ˇS´ ımov´ a, I.; Fuciman, M.; Kerfeld, C
(54) Khan, T.; Dominguez-Martin, M. A.; ˇS´ ımov´ a, I.; Fuciman, M.; Kerfeld, C. A.; Pol´ ıvka, T. Excited-State Properties of Canthaxanthin in Cyanobacterial Carotenoid- Binding Proteins HCP2 and HCP3.J. Phys. Chem. B2020,124, 4896–4905. (55) Berera, R.; van Grondelle, R.; Kennis, J. T. M. Ultrafast Transient Absorption Spec- troscopy: Principles and Ap...
work page 2009
-
[5]
G.; Savolainen, J.; Lincoln, C
(57) Baleviˇ cius, V.; Pour, A. G.; Savolainen, J.; Lincoln, C. N.; Lukeˇ s, V.; Riedle, E.; Valkunas, L.; Abramavicius, D.; Hauer, J. Vibronic Energy Relaxation Approach Highlighting Deactivation Pathways in Carotenoids.Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.2015, 17, 19491–19499. (58) Baleviˇ cius, V.; Abramavicius, D.; Pol´ ıvka, T.; Galestian Pour, A.; Hauer, J. A Un...
work page 2015
-
[6]
How Orange Carotenoid Protein Controls the Excited State Dynamics of Canthaxanthin.Chem
(85) Arcidiacono, A.; Accomasso, D.; Cupellini, L.; Mennucci, B. How Orange Carotenoid Protein Controls the Excited State Dynamics of Canthaxanthin.Chem. Sci.2023,14, 11158–11169. (86) Wilson, A.; Kinney, J. N.; Zwart, P. H.; Punginelli, C.; D’Haene, S.; Perreau, F.; Klein, M. G.; Kirilovsky, D.; Kerfeld, C. A. Structural Determinants Underlying Pho- topr...
work page 2023
-
[7]
This pump light was provided by a supercontinuum laser (SuperK EXTREME EXU-6 PP, NKT Photonics) outfitted with a tuneable filter (SuperK VARIA, NKT Photonics). Pump light was focused by a lens (LA4380, Thorlabs) through the cuvette at∼40°from the cuvette’s normal to minimise transmission and scattering into the spectrometer. The power of the pump was cont...
work page 2000
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.