Abstract
The effects of exogenous vitamin B12 on the green sulfur photosynthetic bacterium Chlorobium (Chl.) tepidum were examined. Wild-type cells and mutant cells lacking a gene CT0388 (denoted as VB0388) of Chl.tepidum were grown in liquid cultures containing different concentrations of vitamin B12. The VB0388 cells hardly grew in vitamin B12-limited media, indicating that the product of CT0388 actually played an important role in vitamin B12 biosynthesis in Chl. tepidum. Both wild-type and VB0388 cells in vitamin B12-limited media exhibited absorption bands and CD signals at the Qy region that were shifted to a shorter wavelength than those of cells grown in normal media. BChl c isomers that had S-stereochemistry at the 3(1)-position tended to increase in Chl. tepidum grown in vitamin B12-limited media.
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