Abstract

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.

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