Abstract

The photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sulfidophilus is able to grow chemotrophically and phototrophically at a broad range of light intensities. In contrast to other facultative phototrophs, R. sulfidophilus synthesizes reaction center and light-harvesting (LH) complexes, B870 (LHI) and B800–850 (LHII) even under full aerobic conditions in the dark. The content of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) varied from 3.8 μg Bchl per mg cell protein when grown at high light intensity (20 000 lux) to 60 μg Bchl per mg cell protein when grown at low light intensities (6 lux). After a shift from high light to low light conditions, the size of the photosynthetic unit increased by a factor of 4. Chromatographie analysis of the LHII complex, isolated and purified from cells grown phototrophically (at high and low light intensities) and chemotrophically, could resolve only one type of a and one type of β polypeptide in the purified complex, of which the N-terminal sequences have been determined.

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