Abstract
The ultrastructure of cells of Acidiphilium rubrum, which is an acidophilic aerobic photosynthetic bacterium containing zinc-complexed bacteriochlorophyll a, was studied by electron microscopy with the rapid substitution technique. Thin-section electron microscopy indicated that any type of internal photosynthetic membranes was not present in this organism despite a relatively high content of the photopigment. The majority of cells had poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate granules and electron-dense spherical bodies identified as being polyphosphate granules. When the organism was grown chemotrophically with 0.1% FeSO(4), it produced another group of electron-dense granules that were associated with the inner part of the cytoplasmic membrane. An energy-dispersive X-ray analysis showed that these membrane-bound, electron-dense granules contained iron.
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