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1.
The gene encoding bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c synthase was identified by insertional inactivation in the photosynthetic green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum and was named bchK. The bchK mutant of C. tepidum was rusty-orange in color and completely lacked BChl c. Because of the absence of the BChl c antenna, the mutant grew about seven times slower than the wild type at light intensities that were limiting to the wild type (< 90 micromol m(-2) s(-1)). Various pheophorbides, which probably represent precursors of BChl c which had lost magnesium, accumulated in the mutant cells. A small fraction of these pheophorbides were apparently esterified by the remaining chlorophyll (Chl) a and BChl a synthases in cells. The amounts of BChl a, Chl a, isoprenoid quinones, carotenoids, Fenna-Matthews-Olson protein, and chlorosome envelope protein CsmA were not significantly altered on a cellular basis in the mutant compared to in the wild type. This suggests that the BChl a antennae, photosynthetic reaction centers, and remaining chlorosome components were essentially unaffected in the mutant. Electron microscopy of thin sections revealed that the mutant lacked normal chlorosomes. However, a fraction containing vestigial chlorosomes, denoted "carotenosomes," was partly purified by density centrifugation; these structures contained carotenoids, isoprenoid quinones, and a 798-nm-absorbing BChl a species that is probably protein associated. Because of the absence of the strong BChl c absorption found in the wild type, the bchK mutant should prove valuable for future analyses of the photosynthetic reaction center and of the roles of BChl a in photosynthesis in green bacteria. An evolutionary implication of our findings is that the photosynthetic ancestor of green sulfur bacteria could have evolved without chlorosomes and BChl c and instead used only BChl a-containing proteins as the major light-harvesting antennae.  相似文献   

2.
Bacteriochlorophylls (BChls) c and d, two of the major light-harvesting pigments in photosynthetic green sulfur bacteria, differ only by the presence of a methyl group at the C-20 methine bridge position in BChl c. A gene potentially encoding the C-20 methyltransferase, bchU, was identified by comparative analysis of the Chlorobium tepidum and Chloroflexus aurantiacus genome sequences. Homologs of this gene were amplified and sequenced from Chlorobium phaeobacteroides strain 1549, Chlorobium vibrioforme strain 8327d, and C. vibrioforme strain 8327c, which produce BChls e, d, and c, respectively. A single nucleotide insertion in the bchU gene of C. vibrioforme strain 8327d was found to cause a premature, in-frame stop codon and thus the formation of a truncated, nonfunctional gene product. The spontaneous mutant of this strain that produces BChl c (strain 8327c) has a second frameshift mutation that restores the correct reading frame in bchU. The bchU gene was inactivated in C. tepidum, a BChl c-producing species, and the resulting mutant produced only BChl d. Growth rate measurements showed that BChl c- and d-producing strains of the same organism (C. tepidum or C. vibrioforme) have similar growth rates at high and intermediate light intensities but that strains producing BChl c grow faster than those with BChl d at low light intensities. Thus, the bchU gene encodes the C-20 methyltransferase for BChl c biosynthesis in Chlorobium species, and methylation at the C-20 position to produce BChl c rather than BChl d confers a significant competitive advantage to green sulfur bacteria living at limiting red and near-infrared light intensities.  相似文献   

3.
Bacteriochlorophylls (BChls) c, d, and e are the major chlorophylls in chlorosomes, which are the largest and one of the most efficient antennae produced by chlorophototrophic organisms. In the biosynthesis of these three BChls, a C-13(2)-methylcarboxyl group found in all other chlorophylls (Chls) must be removed. This reaction is postulated to be the first committed step in the synthesis of these BChls. Analyses of gene neighborhoods of (B)Chl biosynthesis genes and distribution patterns in organisms producing chlorosomes helped to identify a gene (bciC) that appeared to be a good candidate to produce the enzyme involved in this biochemical reaction. To confirm that this was the case, a deletion mutant of an open reading frame orthologous to bciC, CT1077, was constructed in Chlorobaculum tepidum, a genetically tractible green sulfur bacterium. The CT1077 deletion mutant was unable to synthesize BChl c but still synthesized BChl a and Chl a. The deletion mutant accumulated large amounts of various (bacterio)pheophorbides, all of which still had C-13(2)-methylcarboxyl groups. A C. tepidum strain in which CT1077 was replaced by an orthologous gene, Cabther_B0081 [corrected] from "Candidatus Chloracidobacterium thermophilum" was constructed. Although the product of Cabther_B0081 [corrected] was only 28% identical to the product of CT1077, this strain synthesized BChl c, BChl a, and Chl a in amounts similar to wild-type C. tepidum cells. To indicate their roles in the first committed step of BChl c, d, and e biosynthesis, open reading frames CT1077 and Cabther_B0081 [corrected] have been redesignated bciC. The potential mechanism by which BciC removes the C-13(2)-methylcarboxyl moiety of chlorophyllide a is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Chlorosomes are the main light harvesting complexes of green photosynthetic bacteria. Recently, a lamellar model was proposed for the arrangement of pigment aggregates in Chlorobium tepidum chlorosomes, which contain bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c as the main pigment. Here we demonstrate that the lamellar organization is also found in chlorosomes from two brown-colored species (Chl. phaeovibrioides and Chl. phaeobacteroides) containing BChl e as the main pigment. This suggests that the lamellar model is universal among green sulfur bacteria. In contrast to green-colored Chl. tepidum, chlorosomes from the brown-colored species often contain domains of lamellar aggregates that may help them to survive in extremely low light conditions. We suggest that carotenoids are localized between the lamellar planes and drive lamellar assembly by augmenting hydrophobic interactions. A model for chlorosome assembly, which accounts for the role of carotenoids and secondary BChl homologs, is presented.  相似文献   

5.
Green sulfur bacteria possess two light-harvesting antenna systems, the chlorosome and the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) protein. In addition to self-aggregated bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c, chlorosomes of Chlorobium tepidum contain a small amount of BChl a (ratio 100:1). The chlorosomal BChl a is associated with CsmA, a 6.2 kDa protein that accounts for more than 50% of the protein content of chlorosomes. This CsmA-BChl a complex is located in the chlorosome baseplate with the hydrophilic C-terminal part of CsmA in contact with the FMO protein. CsmA was purified from Chl. tepidum. Isolated chlorosomes were lyophilized and extracted with chloroform/methanol (1:1, v/v). The extract was further purified using gel filtration and reverse-phase HPLC and the purity of the preparation confirmed by SDS-PAGE. Mass spectrometric analysis showed an m/z of 6154.8, in agreement with the calculated mass of the csmA gene product after C-terminal processing. CD spectroscopy of the isolated protein showed that the main structural motif was an alpha-helix. We have reconstituted the isolated CsmA protein with BChl a in micelles of n-octyl beta-d-glucopyranoside. The resulting preparation reproduced the spectral characteristics of the CsmA-BChl a complex present in the chlorosome baseplate.  相似文献   

6.
New and rapid procedures were developed for the isolation of chlorosomes and FMO-protein from the green sulfur bacteria Prosthecochloris (P.) aestuarii, Chlorobium (Cb.) phaeovibrioides, Cb. tepidum and Cb. vibrioforme. The resulting preparations were free from contaminating pigments and proteins as was shown by absorption spectroscopy, pigment analysis and SDS-PAGE. Two spectrally different types of FMO-protein were found. The first type, present in P. aestuarii and Cb. vibrioforme, has a main absorption band at 6 K at 815 nm, whereas the second type, isolated from Cb. tepidum and Cb. phaeovibrioides, has a strong band at 806 nm. In contrast to what was recently suggested (Tronrud DE and Matthews BW (1993) In: Deisenhofer J and Norris J (eds) The Photosynthetic Reaction Center, Vol 1, pp 13–21. Academic Press, San Diego, CA) the FMO-proteins contained no polar BChl a homologue. The isolated chlorosomes showed a small blue-shift of the QY absorption maximum with respect to intact cells. For the different species, grown under the same light conditions, the homologue composition of BChls c and d was approximately identical whereas for the BChl e in Cb. phaeovibrioides the relative amounts of homologues with larger alkyl substituents at position 8 were considerably larger. Baseplate BChl a was present in all chlorosomes and comprised 1–2% of the chlorosomal BChl. Its QY absorption band was located at about 802 nm and was clearly separated from the major QY absorption band at 6 K. The predominant esterifying alcohol of BChl a in the chlorosomes as well as in the FMO-proteins was phytol, but both antenna complexes also contained small amounts of BChl a esterified with the metabolic intermediates geranylgeraniol, dihydrogeranylgeraniol and tetrahydrogeranylgeraniol, like most purple bacteria. Since the esterifying alcohols of the chlorosomal BChl a and of the main chlorosomal pigments (BChls c, d and e) are different, esterification, and perhaps also the synthesis, of the BChls in the interior of the chlorosome and of the BChls in the baseplate must be spatially and genetically separated processes.  相似文献   

7.
Energy transfer and pigment arrangement in intact cells of the green sulfur bacteria Prosthecochloris aestuarii, Chlorobium vibrioforme and chlorobium phaeovibrioides, containing bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c, d or e as main light harvesting pigment, respectively, were studied by means of absorption, fluorescence, circular dichroism and linear dichroism spectroscopy at low temperature. The results indicate a very similar composition of the antenna in the three species and a very similar structure of main light harvesting components, the chlorosome and the membrane-bound BChl a protein. In all three species the Qy transition dipoles of BChl c, d or e are oriented approximately parallel to the long axis of the chlorosome. Absorption and fluorescence excitation spectra demonstrate the presence of at least two BChl c-e pools in the chlorosomes of all three species, long-wavelength absorbing BChls being closest to the membrane. In C. phaeovibrioides, energy from BChl e is transferred with an efficiency of 25% to the chlorosomal BChl a at 6 K, whereas the efficiency of transfer from BChl e to the BChl a protein is 10%. These numbers are compatible with the hypothesis that the chlorosomal BChl a is an intermediary in the energy transfer from the chlorosome to the membrane.Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - Chl chlorophyll - CD circular dichroism - LD linear dichroism  相似文献   

8.
Bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c is the major photosynthetic pigment in the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobaculum tepidum, in which it forms protein-independent aggregates that function in light harvesting. BChls c, d, and e are found only in chlorosome-producing bacteria and are unique among chlorophylls because of methylations that occur at the C-8(2) and C-12(1) carbons. Two genes required for these methylation reactions were identified and designated bchQ (CT1777) and bchR (CT1320). BchQ and BchR are members of the radical S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) protein superfamily; each has sequence motifs to ligate a [4Fe-4S] cluster, and we propose that they catalyze the methyl group transfers. bchQ, bchR, and bchQ bchR mutants of C. tepidum were constructed and characterized. The bchQ mutant produced BChl c that was not methylated at C-8(2), the bchR mutant produced BChl c that was not methylated at C-12(1), and the double mutant produced [8-ethyl, 12-methyl]-BChl c that lacked methylation at both the C-8(2) and C-12(1) positions. Compared to the wild type, the Qy absorption bands for BChl c in the mutant cells were narrower and blue shifted to various extents. All three mutants grew slower and had a lower cellular BChl c content than the wild type, an effect that was especially pronounced at low light intensities. These observations show that the C-8(2) and C-12(1) methylations of BChl c play important roles in the adaptation of C. tepidum to low light intensity. The data additionally suggest that these methylations also directly or indirectly affect the regulation of the BChl c biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

9.
The green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum synthesizes three types of (bacterio)chlorophyll ((B)Chl): BChl a(P), Chl a(PD), and BChl c(F). During the synthesis of all three molecules, a C-8 vinyl substituent is reduced to an ethyl group, and in the case of BChl c(F), the C-8(2) carbon of this ethyl group is subsequently methylated once or twice by the radical S-adenosylmethionine enzyme BchQ. The C. tepidum genome contains homologs of two genes, bchJ (CT2014) and CT1063, that are highly homologous to genes, bchJ and AT5G18660, and that have been reported to encode C-8 vinyl reductases in Rhodobacter capsulatus and Arabidopsis thaliana, respectively. To determine which gene product actually encodes a C-8 vinyl reductase activity, the bchJ and CT1063 genes were insertionally inactivated in C. tepidum. All three Chls synthesized by the CT1063 mutant of C. tepidum have a C-8 vinyl group. Using NADPH but not NADH as reductant, recombinant BciA reduces the C-8 vinyl group of 3,8-divinyl-protochlorophyllide in vitro. These data demonstrate that CT1063, renamed bciA, encodes a C-8 divinyl reductase in C. tepidum. The bchJ mutant produces detectable amounts of Chl a(PD), BChl a(P), and BChl c(F), all of which have reduced C-8 substituents, but the mutant cells secrete large amounts of 3,8-divinyl-protochlorophyllide a into the growth medium and have a greatly reduced BChl c(F) content. The results suggest that BchJ may play an important role in substrate channeling and/or regulation of Chl biosynthesis but show that it is not a vinyl reductase. Because only some Chl-synthesizing organisms possess homologs of bciA, at least two types of C-8 vinyl reductases must occur.  相似文献   

10.
Green sulfur bacteria contain chlorophyllous pigments, chlorophyll (Chl) aPD and bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) aP, esterified with Delta2,6-phytadienol and phytol, respectively, which would be produced by reduction of the geranylgeranyl group at the C-17 propionate residue. In the genome of Chlorobium tepidum, two paralogous genes presumably encoding geranylgeranyl reductase, CT1232 and CT2256, are found. The deletion mutants of the CT1232 and CT2256 genes were constructed using an insertional inactivation method in order to clarify the biosynthetic process of the Delta2,6-phytadienyl and phytyl groups in green sulfur bacteria. The compositions of chlorophyllous pigments in the two mutants were determined by LC-MS analysis. The CT2256-deleted mutant accumulated Chl aGG and BChl aGG esterified with geranylgeraniol, indicating that CT2256 was involved in the production of both Delta2,6-phytadienyl and phytyl groups. The relatively high fluorescence emission from chlorosomes in the mutant also suggested some hindrance of the energy transfer from chlorosomes to the reaction center complex. However, the CT1232-deleted mutant almost showed no apparent phenotype compared to the wild type. Furthermore, the purple bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus mutant defective in the bchP gene was partially complemented with the CT2256 gene; BChl aP was synthesized in the mutant in addition to accumulating other intermediates.  相似文献   

11.
A chlorosome is an antenna complex located on the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane in green photosynthetic bacteria that contains tens of thousands of self-assembled bacteriochlorophylls (BChls). Green bacteria are known to incorporate various esterifying alcohols at the C-17 propionate position of BChls in the chlorosome. The effect of these functional substitutions on the biogenesis of the chlorosome has not yet been fully explored. In this report, we address this question by investigating various esterified bacteriochlorophyll c (BChl c) homologs in the thermophilic green non-sulfur bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Cultures were supplemented with exogenous long-chain alcohols at 52 °C (an optimal growth temperature) and 44 °C (a suboptimal growth temperature), and the morphology, optical properties and exciton transfer characteristics of chlorosomes were investigated. Our studies indicate that at 44 °C Cfl. aurantiacus synthesizes more carotenoids, incorporates more BChl c homologs with unsaturated and rigid polyisoprenoid esterifying alcohols and produces more heterogeneous BChl c homologs in chlorosomes. Substitution of phytol for stearyl alcohol of BChl c maintains similar morphology of the intact chlorosome and enhances energy transfer from the chlorosome to the membrane-bound photosynthetic apparatus. Different morphologies of the intact chlorosome versus in vitro BChl aggregates are suggested by small-angle neutron scattering. Additionally, phytol cultures and 44 °C cultures exhibit slow assembly of the chlorosome. These results suggest that the esterifying alcohol of BChl c contributes to long-range organization of BChls, and that interactions between BChls with other components are important to the assembly of the chlorosome. Possible mechanisms for how esterifying alcohols affect the biogenesis of the chlorosome are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Based upon their photosynthetic nature and the presence of a unique light-harvesting antenna structure, the chlorosome, the photosynthetic green bacteria are defined as a distinctive group in the Bacteria. However, members of the two taxa that comprise this group, the green sulfur bacteria (Chlorobi) and the filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria (Chloroflexales), are otherwise quite different, both physiologically and phylogenetically. This review summarizes how genome sequence information facilitated studies of the biosynthesis and function of the photosynthetic apparatus and the oxidation of inorganic sulfur compounds in two model organisms that represent these taxa, Chlorobium tepidum and Chloroflexus aurantiacus. The genes involved in bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c and carotenoid biosynthesis in these two organisms were identified by sequence homology with known BChl a and carotenoid biosynthesis enzymes, gene cluster analysis in Cfx. aurantiacus, and gene inactivation studies in Chl. tepidum. Based on these results, BChl a and BChl c biosynthesis is similar in the two organisms, whereas carotenoid biosynthesis differs significantly. In agreement with its facultative anaerobic nature, Cfx. aurantiacus in some cases apparently produces structurally different enzymes for heme and BChl biosynthesis, in which one enzyme functions under anoxic conditions and the other performs the same reaction under oxic conditions. The Chl. tepidum mutants produced with modified BChl c and carotenoid species also allow the functions of these pigments to be studied in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Chlorosomes of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum comprise mostly bacteriochlorophyll c (BChl c), small amounts of BChl a, carotenoids, and quinones surrounded by a lipid-protein envelope. These structures contain 10 different protein species (CsmA, CsmB, CsmC, CsmD, CsmE, CsmF, CsmH, CsmI, CsmJ, and CsmX) but contain relatively little total protein compared to other photosynthetic antenna complexes. Except for CsmA, which has been suggested to bind BChl a, the functions of the chlorosome proteins are not known. Nine mutants in which a single csm gene was inactivated were created; these mutants included genes encoding all chlorosome proteins except CsmA. All mutants had BChl c contents similar to that of the wild-type strain and had growth rates indistinguishable from or within approximately 90% (CsmC(-) and CsmJ(-)) of those of the wild-type strain. Chlorosomes isolated from the mutants lacked only the protein whose gene had been inactivated and were generally similar to those from the wild-type strain with respect to size, shape, and BChl c, BChl a, and carotenoid contents. However, chlorosomes from the csmC mutant were about 25% shorter than those from the wild-type strain, and the BChl c absorbance maximum was blue-shifted about 8 nm, indicating that the structure of the BChl c aggregates in these chlorosomes is altered. The results of the present study establish that, except with CsmA, when the known chlorosome proteins are eliminated individually, none of them are essential for the biogenesis, light harvesting, or structural organization of BChl c and BChl a within the chlorosome. These results demonstrate that chlorosomes are remarkably robust structures that can tolerate considerable changes in protein composition.  相似文献   

14.
We have studied the organization of the bacteriochlorophylls (BChl) in isolated chlorosomes of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium limicola UdG6040 containing about 50% BChl d and BChl c each. When the chlorosomes are treated in acidic buffer (pH 3.0) two phases in the conversion from BChl to bacteriopheophytin (BPhe) are observed as evidenced by the changes in the absorption spectrum. In the early phase the pheophytinization of BChl d occurs much faster than that of BChl c. In the later phase BChl c and BChl d are converted at similar rates. The delayed BChl c conversion observed in intact chlorosomes is interpreted in terms of spatial separation within the same chlorosome that makes BChl d more accessible to reaction with acid than BChl c. This was supported by acid treatment of in vitro pigment-lipid aggregates which showed that the pheophytinization of aggregates consisting of only BChl c or BChl d takes place with the same rate. Moreover in mixed in vitro aggrega tes where BChl d and BChl c are supposed to be scrambled the two pigments are converted to BPhe simultaneously. Acid treatment of hexanol exposed chlorosomes indicates that the spatial separation of BChl d and BChl c within the chlorosomes is maintained even if the excitonic interaction between BChls has been disturbed by hexanol. Based on these findings it is suggested that BChl d and BChl c in the chlorosome are located distal and proximal, respectively, relative to the chlorosome baseplate.  相似文献   

15.
The green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum is a strict anaerobe and an obligate photoautotroph. On the basis of sequence similarity with known enzymes or sequence motifs, nine open reading frames encoding putative enzymes of carotenoid biosynthesis were identified in the genome sequence of C. tepidum, and all nine genes were inactivated. Analysis of the carotenoid composition in the resulting mutants allowed the genes encoding the following six enzymes to be identified: phytoene synthase (crtB/CT1386), phytoene desaturase (crtP/CT0807), zeta-carotene desaturase (crtQ/CT1414), gamma-carotene desaturase (crtU/CT0323), carotenoid 1',2'-hydratase (crtC/CT0301), and carotenoid cis-trans isomerase (crtH/CT0649). Three mutants (CT0180, CT1357, and CT1416 mutants) did not exhibit a discernible phenotype. The carotenoid biosynthetic pathway in C. tepidum is similar to that in cyanobacteria and plants by converting phytoene into lycopene using two plant-like desaturases (CrtP and CrtQ) and a plant-like cis-trans isomerase (CrtH) and thus differs from the pathway known in all other bacteria. In contrast to the situation in cyanobacteria and plants, the construction of a crtB mutant completely lacking carotenoids demonstrates that carotenoids are not essential for photosynthetic growth of green sulfur bacteria. However, the bacteriochlorophyll a contents of mutants lacking colored carotenoids (crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants) were decreased from that of the wild type, and these mutants exhibited a significant growth rate defect under all light intensities tested. Therefore, colored carotenoids may have both structural and photoprotection roles in green sulfur bacteria. The ability to manipulate the carotenoid composition so dramatically in C. tepidum offers excellent possibilities for studying the roles of carotenoids in the light-harvesting chlorosome antenna and iron-sulfur-type (photosystem I-like) reaction center. The phylogeny of carotenogenic enzymes in green sulfur bacteria and green filamentous bacteria is also discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Results from high-pressure and Stark hole-burning experiments on isolated chlorosomes from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum are presented, as well as Stark hole-burning data for bacteriochlorophyll c (BChl c) monomers in a poly(vinyl butyral) copolymer film. Large linear pressure shift rates of -0.44 and -0.54 cm(-1)/MPa were observed for the chlorosome BChl c Q(y)-band at 100 K and the lowest Q(y)-exciton level at 12 K, respectively. It is argued that approximately half of the latter shift rate is due to electron exchange coupling between BChl c molecules. The similarity between the above shift rates and those observed for the B875 and B850 BChl a rings of the light-harvesting complexes of purple bacteria is emphasized. For BChl c monomer, fDeltamu++ = 0.35 D, where Deltamu+ is the dipole moment change for the Q(y) transition and f is the local field correction factor. The data establish that Deltamu+ is dominated by the matrix-induced contribution. The change in polarizability (Deltaalpha) for the Q(y) transition of the BChl c monomer is estimated at 19 A(3), which is essentially identical to that of the Chl a monomer. Interestingly, no Stark effects were observed for the lowest exciton level of the chlorosomes (maximum Stark field of 10(5) V/cm). Possible explanations for this are given, and these include consideration of structural models for the chlorosome BChl c aggregates.  相似文献   

17.
Chlorosomes of green photosynthetic bacteria constitute the most efficient light harvesting complexes found in nature. In addition, the chlorosome is the only known photosynthetic system where the majority of pigments (BChl) is not organized in pigment-protein complexes but instead is assembled into aggregates. Because of the unusual organization, the chlorosome structure has not been resolved and only models, in which BChl pigments were organized into large rods, were proposed on the basis of freeze-fracture electron microscopy and spectroscopic constraints. We have obtained the first high-resolution images of chlorosomes from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum by cryoelectron microscopy. Cryoelectron microscopy images revealed dense striations approximately 20 A apart. X-ray scattering from chlorosomes exhibited a feature with the same approximately 20 A spacing. No evidence for the rod models was obtained. The observed spacing and tilt-series cryoelectron microscopy projections are compatible with a lamellar model, in which BChl molecules aggregate into semicrystalline lateral arrays. The diffraction data further indicate that arrays are built from BChl dimers. The arrays form undulating lamellae, which, in turn, are held together by interdigitated esterifying alcohol tails, carotenoids, and lipids. The lamellar model is consistent with earlier spectroscopic data and provides insight into chlorosome self-assembly.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of exogenous vitamin B12 on the green sulfur photosynthetic bacterium Chlorobium (Chl.) tepidum were examined. Wild-type cells and mutant cells lacking a gene CT0388 (denoted as VB0388) of Chl.tepidum were grown in liquid cultures containing different concentrations of vitamin B12. The VB0388 cells hardly grew in vitamin B12-limited media, indicating that the product of CT0388 actually played an important role in vitamin B12 biosynthesis in Chl. tepidum. Both wild-type and VB0388 cells in vitamin B12-limited media exhibited absorption bands and CD signals at the Qy region that were shifted to a shorter wavelength than those of cells grown in normal media. BChl c isomers that had S-stereochemistry at the 3(1)-position tended to increase in Chl. tepidum grown in vitamin B12-limited media.  相似文献   

19.
Fluorescence detected magnetic resonance (FDMR) was used to study the lowest triplet state of bacteriochlorophylls (BChls) c and d in Chlorobium (Chl.) tepidum and Chl. vibrioforme, respectively. These pigments were studied both in the oligomeric form (in whole cells) and in the monomeric form (after conversion using a 1% 1-hexanol treatment). Fluorescence spectra show the presence of lower-state aggregates, apart from monomers, in samples treated with 1-hexanol. Values of the zero field splitting (ZFS) parameter D, obtained from FDMR spectra, were found to decrease with an increasing aggregate size. The observed ZFS trends are explained by a delocalization of the triplet spins, including a charge resonance (CR) contribution, over the aggregate. A simple model is presented relating the changes of D and E as a result of monomer aggregation to the aggregate geometry. Application of this model to BChls c and d indicates approximately diagonal stacking of the monomers in the dimer. Results for oligomeric BChl c and d were compared with those previously obtained for oligomeric BChl e. FDMR transitions of BChls c, d and e differ both in frequencies and in signs. The D and E values of Car's and BChl a (in whole cells) agree well with those reported for Chl. phaeobacteroides and Chl. limicola.  相似文献   

20.
The chlorosome antenna of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum essentially consists of aggregated bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c enveloped in a glycolipid monolayer. Small amounts of protein and the isoprenoid quinones chlorobiumquinone (CK) and menaquinone-7 (MK-7) are also present. Treatment of isolated chlorosomes from Cb. tepidum with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) did not affect the quinones, demonstrating that these are located in a site which is inaccessible to SDS, probably in the interior of the chlorosomes. About half of the quinones were removed by Triton X-100. The non-ionic character of Triton probably allowed it to extract components from within the chlorosomes. MK-10 in chlorosomes from the green filamentous bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus was likewise found to be located in the chlorosome interior. The excitation transfer in isolated chlorosomes from Cb. tepidum is redox-regulated. We found a ratio of BChl c fluorescenceintensity under reducing conditions (Fred) to that under oxidizing conditions (Fox) of approximately 40. The chlorosomal BChl a fluorescence was also redox-regulated. When the chlorosomal BChl c–BChl c interactions were disrupted by 1-hexanol, the BChl c Fred/Fox ratiodecreased to approximately 3. When CK and MK-7 were extracted from isolated chlorosomes with hexane, the BChl c Fred/Fox ratio also decreased to approximately 3. A BChl c Fred/Fox ratio of 3–5 was furthermore observed in aggregates of pure BChl c and in chlorosomes from Cfx. aurantiacus which do not contain CK. We therefore suggest that BChl c aggregates inherently exhibit a small redox-dependent fluorescence (Fred/Fox 3) and that the large redox-dependent fluorescence observed in chlorobial chlorosomes (Fred/Fox 40) is CK-dependent.  相似文献   

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