A molecular understanding of complementary chromatic adaptation |
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Authors: | Grossman Arthur R. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA ( |
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Abstract: | Photosynthetic activity and the composition of the photosynthetic apparatus are strongly regulated by environmental conditions. Some visually dramatic changes in pigmentation of cyanobacterial cells that occur during changing nutrient and light conditions reflect marked alterations in components of the major light-harvesting complex in these organisms, the phycobilisome. As noted well over 100 years ago, the pigment composition of some cyanobacteria is very sensitive to ambient wavelengths of light; this sensitivity reflects molecular changes in polypeptide constituents of the phycobilisome. The levels of different pigmented polypeptides or phycobiliproteins that become associated with the phycobilisome are adjusted to optimize absorption of excitation energy present in the environment. This process, called complementary chromatic adaptation, is controlled by a bilin-binding photoreceptor related to phytochrome of vascular plants; however, many other regulatory elements also play a role in chromatic adaptation. My perspectives and biases on the history and significance of this process are presented in this essay. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | Lawrence Bogorad Donald Bryant John Cobley Pamela Conley complementary chromatic adaptation Nancy Federspiel Alexander Glazer David Kehoe Clark Lagarias Peggy Lemaux linear tetrapyrrole photoperception phycobilisomes red and green light Michael Schaefer Nicole Tandeau de Marsac |
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