Abstract: | A spectroscopic study of chlorophyll-protein complexes isolated from Euglena gracilis membranes was carried out to gain information about the state of chlorophyll in vivo and energy transfer in photosynthesis. The membranes were dissociated by Triton X-100 and separated into fractions by sucrose gradient centrifugation and hydroxyapatite chromatography. Four different types of chlorophyll-protein complexes were distinguished from each other and from detergent-solubilized chlorophyll in these fractions by examination of their absorption, fluorescence excitation (400–500 nm) and emission spectra at low temperature. These types were: (1). A mixture of antenna chlorophyll a- and chlorophyll ab-proteins with an absorption maximum at 669 and emission at 682 nm; (2) a P-700-chlorophyll a-protein (chlorophyll: P-700 = 30 : 1), termed CPI with an absorption maximum at 676 nm and emission maxima at 698 and 718 nm; (3) a second chlorophyll a-protein (CPI-2) less enriched in P-700, with an absorption maximum at 676 nm and emission maxima at 680, 722 and 731 nm; (4) a third chlorophyll a-protein (CPa1) with no P-700, absorption maxima at 670 and 683 nm, and an unusually sharp emission maximum at 687 nm. Treatment of CPa1 with sodium dodecyl sulfate drastically altered its spectroscopic properties indicating that at least some chlorophyll-proteins isolated with this detergent are partially denatured. The results suggest that the complex absorption spectra of chlorophyll in vivo are caused by varying proportions of different chlorophyll-protein complexes, each with different groups of chlorophyll molecules bound to it and making up a unique entity in terms of electronic transitions. |