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1.
Green sulfur bacteria possess a complex photosynthetic machinery. The dominant light harvesting systems are chlorosomes, which consist of bacteriochlorophyll c, d or e oligomers with small amounts of protein. The chlorosomes are energetically coupled to the membrane-embedded iron sulfur-type reaction center via a bacteriochlorophyll a-containing baseplate protein and the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) antenna protein. The fluorescence yield and spectral properties of these photosynthetic complexes were investigated in intact cells of several species of green sulfur bacteria under physiological, anaerobic conditions. Surprisingly, green sulfur bacteria show a complex modulation of fluorescence yield upon illumination that is very similar to that observed in oxygenic phototrophs. Within a few seconds of illumination, the fluorescence reaches a maximum, which decreases within a minute of illumination to a lower steady state. Fluorescence spectroscopy reveals that the fluorescence yield during both processes is primarily modulated on the FMO-protein level, while the emission from chlorosomes remains mostly unchanged. The two most likely candidates that modulate bacteriochlorophyll fluorescence are (1) direct excitation quenching at the FMO-protein level and (2) indirect modulation of FMO-protein fluorescence by the reduction state of electron carriers that are part of the reaction center.  相似文献   

2.
The efficiency of energy transfer in chlorosome antennas in the green sulfur bacteria Chlorobium vibrioforme and Chlorobium limicola was found to be highly sensitive to the redox potential of the suspension. Energy transfer efficiencies were measured by comparing the absorption spectrum of the bacteriochlorophyll c or d pigments in the chlorosome to the excitation spectrum for fluorescence arising from the chlorosome baseplate and membrane-bound antenna complexes. The efficiency of energy transfer approaches 100% at low redox potentials induced by addition of sodium dithionite or other strong reductants, and is lowered to 10-20% under aerobic conditions or after addition of a variety of membrane-permeable oxidizing agents. The redox effect on energy transfer is observed in whole cells, isolated membranes and purified chlorosomes, indicating that the modulation of energy transfer efficiency arises within the antenna complexes and is not directly mediated by the redox state of the reaction center. It is proposed that chlorosomes contain a component that acts as a highly quenching center in its oxidized state, but is an inefficient quencher when reduced by endogenous or exogenous reductants. This effect may be a control mechanism that prevents cellular damage resulting from reaction of oxygen with reduced low-potential electron acceptors found in the green sulfur bacteria. The redox modulation effect is not observed in the green gliding bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, which contains chlorosomes but does not contain low-potential electron acceptors.  相似文献   

3.
The fluorescence properties of bacteriochlorophylls (BChl) of the chlorosomal light-harvesting antenna of Oscillochloris trichoides (strain DG-6) from a new family of green filamentous bacteria Oscillochloridaceae were investigated in comparison with green bacteria from two other families. A strong dependence of the fluorescence intensity of chlorosomal bacteriochlorophyll c of Osc. trichoides on the redox potential of medium was found, which previously was observed only in green sulfur bacteria. The presence of BChl a in chlorosomes did not appear in their absorption spectra but was visualized by fluorescence spectroscopy at 77 K. From the comparative analysis of fluorescence spectral data for the chlorosomal light-harvesting antenna of Osc. trichoides and similar spectral data for green bacteria from two other families, it was concluded that, in some fluorescence spectral features (spectral position of bacteriochlorophyll c/a fluorescence bands; shape and full width at half maximum fluorescence band of chlorosomal bacteriochlorophyll c; the Stokes shift value of bacteriochlorophyll c band; a high molar ratio of bacteriochlorophyll c : bacteriochlorophyll a in chlorosomes that makes the bacteriochlorophyll a fluorescence band unresolved at room temperature; and highly redox-dependent fluorescence intensity of chlorosomal bacteriochlorophyll c), Osc. trichoides chlorosomes are close to the chlorosomal antenna of Chlorobiaceae species.  相似文献   

4.
The Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO)-protein and the FMO-reaction center (RC) core complex from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum were examined at 6 K by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. The absorption spectrum of the RC core complex was obtained by a subtraction method and found to have fiye peaks in the QY region, at 797, 808, 818, 834 and 837 nm. The efficiency of energy transfer from carotenoid to bacteriochlorophyll a in the RC core complex was 23% at 6 K, and from the FMO-protein to the core it was 35%. Energy transfer from the FMO-protein to the core complex was also measured in isolated membranes of Prosthecochloris aestuarii from the action spectra of charge separation. Again, a low efficiency of energy transfer was obtained, both at 6 K and at room temperature.Abbreviations BChl- bacteriochlorophyll - P840- primary electron donor - RC- reaction center - FMO-protein- Fenna-Matthews-Olson-protein  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
《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   

7.
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   

8.
The light-harvesting chlorosome antennae of anaerobic, photosynthetic green sulfur bacteria exhibit a highly redox-dependent fluorescence such that the fluorescence intensity decreases under oxidizing conditions. We found that chlorosomes from Chlorobium tepidum contain three isoprenoid quinone species (chlorobiumquinone, menaquinone-7, and an unidentified quinone that probably is a chlorobiumquinone derivative) at a total concentration of approximately 0.1 mol per mol bacteriochlorophyll c. Most of the cellular chlorobiumquinone was found in the chlorosomes and constituted about 70% of the total chlorosome quinone pool. When the quinones were added to artificial, chlorosome-like bacteriochlorophyll c aggregates in an aqueous solution, a high redox dependency of the fluorescence was observed. Chlorobiumquinones were most effective in this respect. A lesser redox dependency of the fluorescence was still observed in the absence of quinones, probably due to another unidentified redox-active component. These results suggest that quinones play a significant, but not exclusive role in controlling the fluorescence and in inhibiting energy transfer in chlorosomes under oxic conditions. Chlorosomes from Chloroflexus aurantiacus contained menaquinone in an amount similar to that of total quinone in Chlorobium tepdium chlorosomes, but did not contain chlorobiumquinones. This may explain the much lower redox-dependent fluorescence observed in Chloroflexus chlorosomes. Received: 4 November 1996 / Accepted: 18 February 1997  相似文献   

9.
Chlorosomes are the light harvesting structures of green photosynthetic bacteria. Each chlorosome from green sulfur bacteria houses hundreds of thousands of bacteriochlorophyll molecules in addition to smaller amounts of chlorobiumquinone and carotenoids. In electron microscopy studies, chlorosomes exhibit different appearances depending on the fixation method used. Fixation with osmium tetroxide results in electron-transparent chlorosomes. Fixation with potassium permanganate results in clearly delineated electron-dense chlorosomes. This fixation method features an electron-transparent area in the interior of the chlorosome. In addition to electron density patterns that can be considered compositions of rod-shaped elements, chlorosomes exhibit a striation pattern that is oriented parallel to the longitudinal axis. Treatment with osmium tetroxide followed by potassium permanganate treatment results in a more diffused density distribution that outlines connecting elements between the chlorosome and the cytoplasmic membrane, and connecting elements between the cytoplasmic membrane and the outer membrane, which act as a diffusion barrier for electron density.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Chlorosomes are specialized compartments that constitute the main light harvesting system of green sulfur bacteria (GSB) and some filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs (FAP). Chlorosome biogenesis promises to be a complex process requiring the generation of a unilayer membrane and the targeting of bacteriochlorophyll, carotenoids, quinones, and proteins to the chlorosome. The biogenesis of chlorosomes as well as their presence in two distinct bacterial groups, GSB and FAP, remains enigmatic. The photosynthetic machinery and overall metabolic characteristics of these two bacterial groups are very different, and horizontal gene transfer has been proposed to explain chlorosome distribution. Chlorosomes have been considered to be unique structures that require a specific assembly machinery. We propose that no special machinery is required for chlorosome assembly. Instead, it is suggested that chlorosomes are a special form of lipid body. We present a model for chlorosome biogenesis that combines aspects of lipid body biogenesis with established chlorosome characteristics and may help explain the presence of chlorosomes in two metabolically diverse organism groups.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Chlorobaculum (Cba) tepidum is a green sulfur bacterium that oxidizes sulfide, elemental sulfur, and thiosulfate for photosynthetic growth. As other anoxygenic green photosynthetic bacteria, Cba tepidum synthesizes bacteriochlorophylls for the assembly of a large light-harvesting antenna structure, the chlorosome. Chlorosomes are sac-like structures that are connected to the reaction centers in the cytoplasmic membrane through the BChl α-containing Fenna–Matthews–Olson protein. Most components of the photosynthetic machinery are known on a biophysical level, however, the structural integration of light harvesting with charge separation is still not fully understood. Despite over two decades of research, gaps in our understanding of cellular architecture exist. Here we present an in-depth analysis of the cellular architecture of the thermophilic photosynthetic green sulfur bacterium of Cba tepidum by cryo-electron tomography. We examined whole hydrated cells grown under different electron donor conditions. Our results reveal the distribution of chlorosomes in 3D in an unperturbed cell, connecting elements between chlorosomes and the cytoplasmic membrane and the distribution of reaction centers in the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
The PscD subunit in the homodimeric "type I" photosynthetic reaction center (RC) complex of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum was disrupted by insertional mutagenesis of its relevant pscD gene. This is the first report on the use of the direct mutagenic approach into the RC-related genes in green sulfur bacteria. The RC complex of C. tepidum is supposed to form a homodimer of two identical PscA subunits together with three other subunits: PscB (FA/FB-containing protein), PscC (cytochrome cz), and PscD. PscD shows a relatively low but significant similarity in its amino acid sequence to PsaD in the photosystem I of plants and cyanobacteria. We studied the biochemical and spectroscopic properties of a mutant lacking PscD in order to elucidate its unknown function. 1) The RC complex isolated from the mutant cells showed no band corresponding to PscD on SDS-PAGE analysis. 2) The growth rate of the PscD-less mutant was slower than that of the wild-type cells at low light intensities. 3) Time-resolved fluorescence spectra at 77 K revealed prolonged decay times of the fluorescence from bacteriochlorophyll c on the antenna chlorosome and from bacteriochlorophyll a on the Fenna-Matthews-Olson antenna protein in the mutant cells. The loss of PscD led to a much slower energy transfer from the antenna pigments to the special pair bacteriochlorophyll a (P840). 4) The mutant strain exhibited slightly less activity of ferredoxin-mediated NADP+ photoreduction compared with that in the wild-type strain. The extent of suppression, however, was less significant than that reported in the PsaD-less mutants of cyanobacterial photosystem I. The evolutionary relationship between PscD and PsaD was also discussed based on a structural homology modeling of the former.  相似文献   

17.
The orientation of pigments and pigment-protein complexes of the green photosynthetic bacterium Prosthecochloris aestuarii was studied by measurement of linear dichroism spectra at 295 and 100 K. Orientation of intact cells and membrane vesicles (Complex I) was obtained by drying on a glass plate. The photochemically active pigment-protein complexes (photosystem-protein complex and reaction center pigment-protein complex) and the antenna bacteriochlorophyll a protein were oriented by pressing a polyacrylamide gel. The data indicate that the near-infrared transitions (Qy) of bacteriochlorophyll c and most bacteriochlorophyll a molecules have a relatively parallel orientation to the membrane, whereas the Qy transitions of the bacteriochlorophyll a in the antenna protein are oriented predominantly perpendicularly to the membrane. Carotenoids and the Qx transitions (590–620 nm) of bacteriochlorophyll a, not belonging to the bacteriochlorophyll a protein, have a relatively perpendicular orientation to the membrane. The absorption and linear dichroism spectra indicate the existence of different pools of bacteriochlorophyll c in the chlorosomes and of carotenoid and bacteriopheophytin c in the cell membrane. The results suggest that the photosystem-protein and reaction center pigment-protein complexes are oriented with their short axes approximately perpendicular to the plane of the membrane. The symmetry axis of the bacteriochlorophyll a protein has an approximately perpendicular orientation.  相似文献   

18.
The bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl) c content and organization was determined for Chlorobium (Cb.) tepidum chlorosomes, the light-harvesting complexes from green photosynthetic bacteria, using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy. Single-chlorosome fluorescence data was analyzed in terms of the correlation of the fluorescence intensity with time. Using this technique, known as fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, chlorosomes were shown to have a hydrodynamic radius (Rh) of 25 +/- 3.2 nm. This technique was also used to determine the concentration of chlorosomes in a sample, and pigment extraction and quantitation was used to determine the molar concentration of Bchl c present. From these data, a number of approximately 215,000 +/- 80,000 Bchl c per chlorosome was determined. Homogeneity of the sample was further characterized by dynamic light scattering, giving a single population of particles with a hydrodynamic radius of 26.8 +/- 3.7 nm in the sample. Tapping-mode atomic force microscopy (TMAFM) was used to determine the x,y,z dimensions of chlorosomes present in the sample. The results of the TMAFM studies indicated that the average chlorosome dimensions for Cb. tepidum was 174 +/- 8.3 x 91.4 +/- 7.7 x 10.9 +/- 2.71 nm and an overall average volume 90,800 nm(3) for the chlorosomes was determined. The data collected from these experiments as well as a model for Bchl c aggregate dimensions was used to determine possible arrangements of Bchl c oligomers in the chlorosomes. The results obtained in this study have significant implications on chlorosome structure and architecture, and will allow a more thorough investigation of the energetics of photosynthetic light harvesting in green bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
A new and rapid procedure has been developed for the isolation of the bacteriochlorophyll a-containing Fenna—Matthews—Olson (FMO)-protein from green sulfur bacteria. Polyclonal antibodies raised against the FMO-protein of Chlorobium (Chl.) tepidum were employed in the preparation of an antibody column utilizing immobilized protein A as the matrix. The antibody column afforded essentially a one-step purification process, resulting in preparations that were free from contaminating pigments and proteins. This was evidenced by absorption spectroscopy, SDS—PAGE, and fluorescence emission.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Fluorescence emission spectra were measured of intact cells and subcellular preparations of the green photosynthetic bacterium Prosthecochloris aestuarii in the presence and in the absence of dithionite. A 3–5-fold increase in bacteriochlorophyll a fluorescence at 816 nm occurred upon addition of dithionite in a membrane vesicle preparation (Complex I), in a photochemically active pigment-protein complex and in a bacteriochlorophyll a protein complex free from reaction centers. The pigment-protein complex showed a relatively strong long-wave emission band (835 nm) of bacteriochlorophyll a, which was preferentially excited by light absorbed at 670 nm and was not stimulated by dithionite. With Complex I, which contains some bacteriochlorophyll c in addition to bacteriochlorophyll a, a 3–4-fold stimulation of bacteriochlorophyll c emission was also observed. Emission bands at shorter wavelengths, probably due to artefacts, were quenched by dithionite. With intact cells, the effect of dithionite was smaller, and consisted mainly of an increase of bacteriochlorophyll a emission.

The results indicate that the strong increase in the yield of bacteriochlorophyll emission that occurred upon generating reducing conditions is, at least mainly, due to a direct effect on the light-harvesting systems, and does not involve the reaction center as had been earlier postulated.  相似文献   


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