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Energy transfers from Photosystem II to Photosystem I in Cryptomonas rufescens (Cryptophyceae)
Authors:Christiane Lichtlé  Henri Jupin  Jean Claude Duval
Affiliation:1. Laboratoire de Cytophysiologie végétale de l''Ecole Normale Supérieure, 24 rue Lhomond, 75231 Paris Cedex 05 France;2. Laboratoire de Biologie végétale, Centre Universitaire de Perpignan, 66025 Perpignan Cedex France
Abstract:In Cryptomonas rufescens (Cryptophyceae), phycoerythrin located in the thylakoid lumen is the major accessory pigment. Oxygen action spectra prove phycoerythrin to be efficient in trapping light energy.The fluorescence excitation spectra at ?196°C obtained by the method of Butler and Kitajima (Butler, W.L. and Kitajima, M. (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 396, 72–85) indicate that like in Rhodophycease, chlorophyll a is the exclusive light-harvesting pigment for Photosystem I.For Photosystem II we can observe two types of antennae: (1) a light-harvesting chlorophyll complex connected to Photosystem II reaction centers, which transfers excitation energy to Photosystem I reaction centers when all the Photosystem II traps are closed. (2) A light-harvesting phycoerythrin complex, which transfers excitation energy exclusively to the Photosystem II reaction complexes responsible for fluorescence at 690 nm.We conclude that in Cryptophyceae, phycoerythrin is an efficient light-harvesting pigment, organized as an antenna connected to Photosystem II centers, antenna situated in the lumen of the thylakoid. However, we cannot afford to exclude that a few parts of phycobilin pigments could be connected to inactive chlorophylls fluorescing at 690 nm.
Keywords:Photosystem II antenna  Energy transfer  Phycoerythrin  Light-harvesting pigment  (Cryptomonas rufescens)  PS I  Photosystem I  PS II  Photosystem II
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