Abstract

Phototaxis of the unicellular red alga Porphyridium cruentum was studied by staining the slime tracks of individual cells as well as with the aid of a population method. Because of the increased straightness of the movement the mean linear velocity of a unilaterally illuminated population exceeds considerably that of an only photokinetically stimulated one. In white light the phototactic reaction is saturated already at 100 lx. The zero threshold lies at about 1 lx. Spectral sensitivity curves of phototaxis obtained at high photon fluence rates (>=10−11 mol cm−2 s−1) display two main peaks which shift against each other at intermediate irradiances and, finally, form a single maximum in the blue range (443 nm) at low photon fluence rates (10−12 and 10−13 mol cm−2 s−1). Photon fluence rate-response curves reveal that supraoptimal irradiances decrease the phototactic reaction, especially in the range of the highest sensitivity of the cells. The action spectrum of phototaxis was calculated on the basis of the photon fluence rate-response curves. It shows a maximum at 443 nm and shoulder at 416 nm and between 467 and 477 nm. Wavelengths longer than 540 nm are phototactically inactive even at very high irradiances (25 W m−2). Thus, this is the first phototactic action spectrum of a biliprotein-containing organism which does not indicate the participation of biliproteins in the absorption of phototactically active light. DCMU and potassium iodide have no specific effects on phototaxis.

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