首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
Isolated chlorosomes, treated with the detergent lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS), can be separated into two green fractions by agarose gel electrophoresis. One fraction contains chlorosomes with a full complement of proteins and antenna BChl c absorbing at 740 nm, but with a more spherical form than the normal ellipsoid shape observed in control chlorosomes. The second fraction was completely devoid of proteins but had a similar absorption spectrum. Electron micrographs of the protein-free fraction indicated the presence of stain-excluding spheres with overall dimensions resembling those of intact chlorosomes (40–100 nm). These spheres are probably micelles of BChl c liberated from the chlorosomes during the detergent treatment, since similar structures could be produced when purified BChl c, dissolved in 1-hexanol, was dispersed in buffer, producing an aggregate absorbing at 742 nm. These results suggest that the chlorosome proteins are not required to produce an arrangement of BChl c chromophores which gives rise to a 740 nm absorption peak resembling that of intact chlorosomes. It seems probable, however, that proteins have a role in determining the overall shape of the chlorosome. Treatment with cross-linking reagents did not prevent the detergent-induced changes in chlorosome morphology.Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - DSP dithiobis-succinimidyl-2-propionate - EM electron microscopy - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - MGDG monogalactosyl diacylglycerol - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

2.
We have used measurements of fluorescence and circular dichroism (CD) to compare chlorosome-membrane preparations derived from the green filamentous bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus grown in continuous culture at two different light-intensities. The cells grown under low light (6 mol m–2 s–1) had a higher ratio of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c to BChl a than cells grown at a tenfold higher light intensity; the high-light-grown cells had much more carotenoid per bacteriochlorophyll.The anisotropy of the QY band of BChl c was calculated from steady-state fluorescence excitation and emission spectra with polarized light. The results showed that the BChl c in the chlorosomes derived from cells grown under high light has a higher structural order than BChl c in chlorosomes from low-light-grown cells. In the central part of the BChl c fluorescence emission band, the average angles between the transition dipole moments for BChl c molecules and the symmetry axis of the chlorosome rod element were estimated as 25° and 17° in chlorosomes obtained from the low- and high-light-grown cells, respectively.This difference in BChl organization was confirmed by the decay associated spectra of the two samples obtained using picosecond single-photon-counting experiments and global analysis of the fluorescence decays. The shortest decay component obtained, which probably represents energy-transfer from the chlorosome bacteriochlorophylls to the BChl a in the baseplate, was 15 ps in the chlorosomes from high-light-grown cell but only 7 ps in the preparation from low-light grown cells. The CD spectra of the two preparations were very different: chlorosomes from low-light-grown cells had a type II spectrum, while those from high-light-grown cells was of type I (Griebenow et al. (1991) Biochim Biophys Acta 1058: 194–202). The different shapes of the CD spectra confirm the existence of a qualitatively different organization of the BChl c in the two types of chlorosome.Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - CD circular dichroism - DAS decay associated spectrum - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride  相似文献   

3.
Candidatus Chlorothrix halophila” is a recently described halophilic, filamentous, anoxygenic photoautotroph (J. A. Klappenbach and B. K. Pierson, Arch. Microbiol. 181:17-25, 2004) that was enriched from the hypersaline microbial mats at Guerrero Negro, Mexico. Analysis of the photosynthetic apparatus by negative staining, spectroscopy, and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the photosynthetic apparatus in this organism has similarities to the photosynthetic apparatus in both the Chloroflexi and Chlorobi phyla of green photosynthetic bacteria. The chlorosomes were found to be ellipsoidal and of various sizes, characteristics that are comparable to characteristics of chlorosomes in other species of green photosynthetic bacteria. The absorption spectrum of whole cells was dominated by the chlorosome bacteriochlorophyll c (BChl c) peak at 759 nm, with fluorescence emission at 760 nm. A second fluorescence emission band was observed at 870 nm and was tentatively attributed to a membrane-bound antenna complex. Fluorescence emission spectra obtained at 77 K revealed another complex that fluoresced at 820 nm, which probably resulted from the chlorosome baseplate complex. All of these results suggest that BChl c is present in the chlorosomes of “Ca. Chlorothrix halophila,” that BChl a is present in the baseplate, and that there is a membrane-bound antenna complex. Analysis of the proteins in the chlorosomes revealed an ~6-kDa band, which was found to be related to the BChl c binding protein CsmA found in other green bacteria. Overall, the absorbance and fluorescence spectra of “Ca. Chlorothrix halophila” revealed an interesting mixture of photosynthetic characteristics that seemed to have properties similar to properties of both phyla of green bacteria when they were compared to the photosynthetic characteristics of Chlorobium tepidum and Chloroflexus aurantiacus.  相似文献   

4.
The photosynthetic green bacterium Chlorobium limicola 6230 has been examined by freeze-fracture electron microscopy to investigate the size, form, distribution and supramolecular architecture of its chlorosomes (chlorobium vesicles) as well as the chlorosome attachment sites on the cytoplasmic membrane. The oblong chlorosomes that underlie the cytoplasmic membrane show a considerable variation in size from about 40 × 70 nm to 100 × 260 nm and exhibit no particular orientation. The chlorosome core, which appears to be hydrophobic in nature, contains between 10 and 30 rod-shaped elements (approx. 10 nm in diameter) surrounded by an unetchable matrix. The rod elements are closely packed and extend the full length of the chlorosome. Separating the chlorosome core from the cytoplasm is a approx. 3 nm thick lipid-like envelope layer, which exhibits no substructure. A 5–6 nm thick, crystalline baseplate connects the chlorosome to the cytoplasmic membrane. The ridges of the baseplate lattice make an angle of between 40° and 60° with the longitudinal axis of the chlorosome and have a repeating distance of approx. 6 nm. In addition, each ridge exhibits a granular substructure with a periodicity of approx. 3.3 nm. The cytoplasmic membrane regions adjacent to the baseplates are enriched in large (greater than 9 nm) intramembrane particles, most of which belong to approx. 10 nm and approx. 12.5 nm particle size categories. Each chlorosome attachment site contains between 20 and 30 very large (greater than 12.0 nm diameter) intramembrane particles.The following interpretive model of a chlorosome is discussed in terms of biophysical, biochemical and structural information reported by others: it is proposed that the bacteriochlorophyll c (BChl c; chlorobium chlorophyll) is located in the rod elements of the core and that it is complexed with specific proteins. The cytoplasm-associated envelope layer is depicted as consisting of a monolayer of galactosyl diacylglycerol molecules. BChl a-protein complexes in a planar lattice configuration most likely make up the crystalline baseplate. The greater than 12-nm particles in the chlorosome attachment sites of the cytoplasmic membrane, finally, may correspond to complexes containing a reaction center and non-crystalline light-harvesting BChl a. The crystalline nature of the baseplate is consistent with the notion that it serves two functions: besides transferring excitation energy to the reaction centers it could also function as a distributor of this energy amongst the reaction centers.  相似文献   

5.
Chlorosomes are the light-harvesting organelles in photosynthetic green bacteria and typically contain large amounts of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c in addition to smaller amounts of BChl a, carotenoids, and several protein species. We have isolated vestigial chlorosomes, denoted carotenosomes, from a BChl c-less, bchK mutant of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum. The physical shape of the carotenosomes (86 ± 17 nm × 66 ± 13 nm × 4.3 ± 0.8 nm on average) was reminiscent of a flattened chlorosome. The carotenosomes contained carotenoids, BChl a, and the proteins CsmA and CsmD in ratios to each other comparable to their ratios in wild-type chlorosomes, but all other chlorosome proteins normally found in wild-type chlorosomes were found only in trace amounts or were not detected. Similar to wild-type chlorosomes, the CsmA protein in the carotenosomes formed oligomers at least up to homo-octamers as shown by chemical cross-linking and immunoblotting. The absorption spectrum of BChl a in the carotenosomes was also indistinguishable from that in wild-type chlorosomes. Energy transfer from the bulk carotenoids to BChl a in carotenosomes was poor. The results indicate that the carotenosomes have an intact baseplate made of remarkably stable oligomeric CsmA–BChl a complexes but are flattened in structure due to the absence of BChl c. Carotenosomes thus provide a valuable material for studying the biogenesis, structure, and function of the photosynthetic antennae in green bacteria.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of 1-hexanol on spectral properties and the processes of energy transfer of the green gliding photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus was investigated with reference to the baseplate region. On addition of 1-hexanol to a cell suspension in a concentration of one-fourth saturation, a specific change in the baseplate region was induced: that is, a bleach of the 793-nm component, and an increase in absorption of the 813-nm component. This result was also confirmed by fluorescence spectra of whole cells and isolated chlorosomes. The processes of energy transfer were affected in the overall transfer efficiency but not kinetically, indicating that 1-hexanol suppressed the flux of energy flow from the baseplate to the B806-866 complexes in the cytoplasmic membranes. The fluorescence excitation spectrum suggests a specific site of interaction between bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c with a maximum at 771 nm in the rod elements and BChl a with a maximum at 793 nm in the baseplate, which is a funnel for a fast transfer of energy to the B806-866 complexes in the membranes. The absorption spectrum of chlorosomes was resolved to components consistently on the basis, including circular dichroism and magnetic circular dichroism spectra; besides two major BChl c forms, bands corresponding to tetramer, dimer, and monomer were also discernible, which are supposed to be intermediary components for a higher order structure. A tentative model for the antenna system of C. aurantiacus is proposed.Abbreviations A670 a component whose absorption maximum is located at 670 nm - (B)Chl (bacterio)chlorophyll - CD circular dichroism - F675 a component whose emission maximum is located at 675 nm - FMO protein Fenna-Mathews-Olson protein - LD linear dichroism - LH light-harvesting - McD magnetic circular dichroism - PS photosystem - RC reaction center  相似文献   

7.
The transfer of excitation energy and the pigment arrangement in isolated chlorosomes of the thermophilic green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus were studied by means of absorption, fluorescence and linear dichroism spectroscopy, both at room temperature and at 4 K. The low temperature absorption spectrum shows bands of the main antenna pigments BChl c and carotenoid, in addition to which bands of BChl a are present at 798 and 613 nm. Fluorescence measurements showed that excitation energy from BChl c and carotenoid is transferred to BChl a, which presumably functions as an intermediate in energy transfer from the chlorosome to the cytoplasmic membrane. Measurements of fluorescence polarization and the use of two different orientation techniques for linear dichroism experiments enabled us to determine the orientation of several transition dipole moments with respect to each other and to the three principal axes of the chlorosome. The Qy transition of BChl a is oriented almost perfectly perpendicular to the long axis of the chlorosome. The Qy transition of BChl c and the -carotene transition dipole are almost parallel to each other. They make an angle of about 40° with the long axis and of about 70° with the short axis of the chlorosome; the angle between these transitions and the BChl a Qy transition is close to the magic angle (55°).Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - CD circular dichroism - LD linear dichroism Dedicated to Prof. L.N.M. Duysens on the occasion of his retirement.  相似文献   

8.
Whole cells, chlorosome-membrane complexes and isolated chlorosomes of the green mesophilic filamentous bacterium Oscillochloris trichoides, representing a new family of the green bacteria Oscillochloridaceae, were studied by optical spectroscopy and electron microscopy. It was shown that the main light-harvesting pigment in the chlorosome is BChl c. The presence of BChl a in chlorosomes was visualized only by pigment extraction and fluorescence spectroscopy at 77 K. The molar ratio BChl c: BChl a in chlorosomes was found to vary from 70:1 to 110:1 depending on light intensity used for cell growth. Micrographs of negatively and positively stained chlorosomes as well as of ultrathin sections of the cells were obtained and used for morphometric measurements of chlorosomes. Our results indicated that Osc. trichoides chlorosomes resemble, in part, those from Chlorobiaceae species, namely, in some spectral features of their absorption, fluorescence, CD spectra, pigment content as well as the morphometric characteristics. Additionally, it was shown that similar to Chlorobiaceae species, the light-harvesting chlorosome antenna of Osc. trichoides exhibited a highly redox-dependent BChl c fluorescence. At the same time, the membrane B805–860 BChl a antenna of Osc. trichoides is close to the membrane B808–866 BChl a antenna of Chloroflexaceae species. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

9.
《BBA》1986,848(1):77-82
Isolated chlorosomes of the photosynthetic green sulfur bacterium Chorobium limicola upon cooling to 4 K showed, in addition to the near-infrared absorption band at 753 nm due to bacteriochlorophyll c, a weak band near 800 nm that could be attributed to bacteriochlorophyll a. The emission spectrum showed bands of bacteriochlorophyll c and a at 788 and 828 nm, respectively. The fluorescence excitation spectrum indicated a high efficiency of energy transfer from bacteriochlorophyll c to bacteriochlorophyll a. When all bacteriochlorophyll c absorption had been lost upon storage, no appreciable change in the optical properties of the bacteriochlorophyll a contained in these ‘depleted chlorosomes’ was observed. The fluorescence and absorption spectra of the chlorosomal bacteriochlorophyll a were clearly different from those of the soluble bacteriochlorophyll a protein present in these bacteria. The results provide strong evidence that bacteriochlorophyll a, although present in a small amount, is an integral constituent of the chlorosome. It presumably functions in the transfer of energy from the chlorosome to the photosynthetic membrane; its spectral properties and the orientation of its near-infrared optical transitions as determined by linear dichroism are such as to favor this energy transfer.  相似文献   

10.
《BBA》1987,891(3):275-285
The formation of excited states and energy transfer in chlorosomes of the green photosynthetic bacteria Chlorobium limicola and Chloroflexus aurantiacus were studied by measurements of flash-induced absorbance changes and fluorescence. Upon excitation with 35 ps, 532 nm flashes, large absorbance decreases around 750 nm were observed that were due to the disappearance of ground state absorption of the main pigment, bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c. The absorbance changes decayed after the flash with a time constant of approx. 1 ns, together with faster components. Absorbance changes that could be ascribed to formation of excited BChl a were much smaller than those of BChl c. The yields of BChl c and BChl a fluorescence were measured as a function of the energy density of the exciting flash. At high energy a strong quenching occurred caused by annihilation of singlet excited states. An analysis of the results shows that energy transfer between BChl c molecules is very efficient and that in C. limicola excitations can probably move freely through the entire chlorosome (which contains about 10 000 BChls c). The chlorosome thus serves as a common antenna for several reaction centres. The small amounts of BChl a present in the chlorosomes of both species form clusters of only a few molecules. Upon cooling to 4 K the sizes of the domains of BChl c for energy transfer decreased considerably. The results are discussed in relation to recently suggested models for the pigment organization within chlorosomes.  相似文献   

11.
In contrast to photosynthetic reaction centers, which share the same structural architecture, more variety is found in the light-harvesting antenna systems of phototrophic organisms. The largest antenna system described, so far, is the chlorosome found in anoxygenic green bacteria, as well as in a recently discovered aerobic phototroph. Chlorosomes are the only antenna system, in which the major light-harvesting pigments are organized in self-assembled supramolecular aggregates rather than on protein scaffolds. This unique feature is believed to explain why some green bacteria are able to carry out photosynthesis at very low light intensities. Encasing the chlorosome pigments is a protein-lipid monolayer including an additional antenna complex: the baseplate, a two-dimensional paracrystalline structure containing the chlorosome protein CsmA and bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a). In this article, we review current knowledge of the baseplate antenna complex, which physically and functionally connects the chlorosome pigments to the reaction centers via the Fenna–Matthews–Olson protein, with special emphasis on the well-studied green sulfur bacterium Chlorobaculum tepidum (previously Chlorobium tepidum). A possible role for the baseplate in the biogenesis of chlorosomes is discussed. In the final part, we present a structural model of the baseplate through combination of a recent NMR structure of CsmA and simulation of circular dichroism and optical spectra for the CsmA–BChl a complex.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Chlorosomes of photosynthetic green bacteria are unique molecular assemblies providing efficient light harvesting followed by multi-step transfer of excitation energy to reaction centers. In each chlorosome, 104–105 bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c/d/e molecules are organized by self-assembly into high-ordered aggregates. We studied the early-time dynamics of the excitation energy flow and energy conversion in chlorosomes isolated from Chloroflexus (Cfx.) aurantiacus bacteria by pump-probe spectroscopy with 30-fs temporal resolution at room temperature. Both the S2 state of carotenoids (Cars) and the Soret states of BChl c were excited at ~490 nm, and absorption changes were probed at 400–900 nm. A global analysis of spectroscopy data revealed that the excitation energy transfer (EET) from Cars to BChl c aggregates occurred within ~100 fs, and the Soret → Q energy conversion in BChl c occurred faster within ~40 fs. This conclusion was confirmed by a detailed comparison of the early exciton dynamics in chlorosomes with different content of Cars. These processes are accompanied by excitonic and vibrational relaxation within 100–270 fs. The well-known EET from BChl c to the baseplate BChl a proceeded on a ps time-scale. We showed that the S1 state of Cars does not participate in EET. We discussed the possible presence (or absence) of an intermediate state that might mediates the Soret → Qy internal conversion in chlorosomal BChl c. We discussed a possible relationship between the observed exciton dynamics and the structural heterogeneity of chlorosomes.  相似文献   

14.
Examination was made of changes in fluorescence polarization plane by energy transfer in the chlorosomes of the green photosynthetic bacterium,Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Fluorescence anisotropy in the picosecond (ps) time region was analyzed using chlorosomes suspended in solution as well as those oriented in a polyacrylamide gel. When the main component of BChlc was preferentially excited, the decay of fluorescence anisotropy was found to depend on wavelength. In the chlorosome suspension, the anisotropy ratio of BChlc changed from 0.31 to 0.24 within 100 ps following excitation. In the baseplate BChla region, this ratio decreased to a negative value (–0.09) from the initial 0.14. In oriented samples, the degree of polarization remained at 0.68 for BChlc, and changed from 0.25 to –0.40 for the baseplate BChla by excitation light whose electric vector was parallel to the longest axis of chlorosomes. In the latter case, there was a shift from 0.30 to –0.55 by excitation perpendicular to the longest axis. Time-resolved fluorescence polarization spectra clearly indicated extensive changes in polarization plane accompanied by energy transfer. The directions of polarization plane of emission from oriented samples were mostly dependent on chlorosome orientation in the gel but not on that of the polarization plane of excitation light. Orientations of the dipole moment of fluorescence components was consistent with that of absorption components as determined by the linear dichroism (Matsuura et al. (1993) Photochem. Photobiol. 57: 92–97). A model for molecular organization of BChlc anda in chlorosomes is proposed based on anisotropic optical properties.  相似文献   

15.
Chlorosome antenna complexes from green photosynthetic bacteria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Chlorosomes are the distinguishing light-harvesting antenna complexes that are found in green photosynthetic bacteria. They contain bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c, d, e in natural organisms, and recently through mutation, BChl f, as their principal light-harvesting pigments. In chlorosomes, these pigments self-assemble into large supramolecular structures that are enclosed inside a lipid monolayer to form an ellipsoid. The pigment assembly is dictated mostly by pigment–pigment interactions as opposed to protein–pigment interactions. On the bottom face of the chlorosome, the CsmA protein aggregates into a paracrystalline baseplate with BChl a, and serves as the interface to the next energy acceptor in the system. The exceptional light-harvesting ability at very low light conditions of chlorosomes has made them an attractive subject of study for both basic and applied science. This review, incorporating recent advancements, considers several important aspects of chlorosomes: pigment biosynthesis, organization of pigments and proteins, spectroscopic properties, and applications to bio-hybrid and bio-inspired devices.  相似文献   

16.
Room temperature absorption difference spectra were measured on the femtosecond through picosecond time scales for chlorosomes isolated from the green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Anomalously high values of photoinduced absorption changes were revealed in the BChl c Qy transition band. Photoinduced absorption changes at the bleaching peak in the BChl c band were found to be 7–8 times greater than those at the bleaching peak in the BChl a band of the chlorosome. This appears to be the first direct experimental proof of excitation delocalization over many BChl c antenna molecules in the chlorosome.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of temperature on the aggregation of 3lR-8,12-diethyl farnesyl bacteriochlorophyll c in a mixture of n-pentane and methylcyclohexane (1/1, v/v) was studied by means of absorption, circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy. At room temperature essentially only two aggregate species, absorbing at 702 nm (A-702) and 719 nm (A-719), were present. Upon cooling to 219 K, A-702 was quantitatively converted to A-719. Further lowering of the temperature led to the stepwise formation of larger aggregates by the conversion of A-719 to aggregate species absorbing at 743 nm (A-743) and 755 nm (A-755). All absorption changes were reversible. A-719 was highly fluorescent (maximum at 192 K: 744 nm), while A-743 and especially A-755 were weakly fluorescent. Below 130 K the mixture solidified, and no major changes in the absorption spectrum were observed upon further cooling. At 45 K, however, a relatively strong emission at 775 nm was observed. Below 200 K, the absorption, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectra resembled that of the chlorosome. These results open up the possibility to study higher aggregates of BChl c as models for the chlorosome by various methods at low temperature, thus avoiding interference by thermal processes.Abbreviations A-680, A-702, A-719, A-743 and A-755- BChl c aggregates absorbing at the wavelengths indicated - BChl- bacteriochlorophyll - R[E,E] BChl c F- the 31 R isomer of 8,12-diethyl BChl c esterified with farnesol (F), analogously - M- methyl - Pr- propyl - S- stearol (see Smith 1994) - CD- circular dichroism  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The polarization anisotropy of fluorescence spectra from single chlorosomes isolated from a green sulfur bacterium, Chlorobium (Cb.) tepidum, was observed at 13 K. As the polarizer was rotated, the intensities of the fluorescence bands of both bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)-c self-aggregates and BChl-a in baseplate proteins showed clear oscillations. From the oscillation, the values of the degree of polarization (DP) and the phase shift (PS) between the BChl-c and BChl-a bands were determined for each single chlorosome. The DP versus PS plot for Cb. tepidum chlorosomes showed linear correlations between the PS and the DP values for both BChl-c and BChl-a fluorescence bands. This tendency could be explained from a simulation assuming a random orientation of chlorosomes and a triaxial orientation distribution of emitting transition dipoles within a single chlorosome. The intensity ratios among the X-/Y-/Z-principal transition dipoles were estimated to be 0.3/0.5/1 and 1/0.6/0.1 for the BChl-c and BChl-a fluorescence bands, respectively. Here, the X-, Y-, and Z-axes are perpendicular, parallel to the cytoplasmic membrane, and parallel to the chlorosome long axis, respectively. A theoretical calculation based on the exciton theory was conducted to reproduce the observed triaxial orientation distribution of emitting transition dipoles. The simulation revealed that a deformation introduced to the circular cross section of the rod-shaped BChl-c self-aggregates could qualitatively reproduce results of this study.  相似文献   

20.
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   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号