Affiliation:
1. Institut für Biologie 2 (Mikrobiologie), Universität Freiburg, Federal Republic of Germany.
Abstract
Control of bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl), magnesium protoporphyrin monomethyl ester (MgPME), cytochromes, and coproporphyrin by light was studied with chemostat cultures of Rhodobacter sphaeroides growing at a constant dilution rate. By increasing the growth-limiting light energy flux from 10 to 55 W/m2, specific Bchl contents decreased from 19.3 to 7.9 nmol/mg of protein. This was strictly proportional to a decrease in the ratio of B800-850 to B875 light-harvesting complexes. MgPME levels increased from 1.5 to 5.3 nmol/mg of protein, while cytochrome as well as coproporphyrin levels stayed constant at 0.46 and 1.95 nmol/mg of protein, respectively. Since in chemostat cultures steady-state levels of a product represent the rate of synthesis, these results infer only slight control of the rate-limiting step of total tetrapyrrol formation by light. In substrate-limited cultures MgPME was accumulated when growth and Bchl formation approached substrate saturation. This suggests that light controls a second step, i.e., MgPME conversion, whenever too much precursor is available, owing to the low sensitivity of the initial step of control. MgPME was preferentially localized in a subcellular fraction with high contents of B875 complexes. A second fraction exhibiting increased contents of B800-850 complexes lacked significant levels of MgPME. These results are discussed in terms of localization of Bchl synthesis in the membrane system of R. sphaeroides.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
9 articles.
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