Abstract

The chromatophore of a novel thermophilic purple photosynthetic bacterium, Chromatium tepidum, had light-harvesting BChl proteins which gave absorption maxima at 917, 855 and 800 nm at 20°C. These antenna complexes were found to have BChl of the a type [4]. This is, therefore, the first example of a BChl a antenna complex which shows a long-wavelength absorption up to 917 nm. Treatment by Triton X-100 and successive sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separated these antenna complexes into two groups. One of them has one antenna component which absorbs around 917 nm (B917). The other contains at least an antennae which absorb maximally at 800 and 855 nm (B800–855). The temperature-dependent changes of absorption, circular dichroism and emission spectra were reversible up to 70°C in the intact chromatophore and in the isolated B800–855 complex. On the contrary, the isolated complex B917 lost its absorption irreversibly over the temperature of 50°C. These results suggest a membrane structure which is essential for the thermostability of chromatophores from C. tepidum.

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