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Isolation of Chlorophyll-protein Complexes and Quantification of Electron Transport Components in Synura Petersenii and Tribonema Aequale

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Journal Photosynth Res
Publisher Springer
Date 2014 Jan 25
PMID 24458525
Citations 2
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Abstract

The chlorophyll-protein complexes of the yellow alga Synura petersenii (Chrysophyceae) and the yellow-green alga Tribonema aequale (Xanthophyceae) were studied. The sodiumdodecylsulfate/sodiumdesoxycholate solubilized photosynthetic membranes of these species yielded three distinct pigment-protein complexes and a non-proteinuous zone of free pigments, when subjected to SDS polyacrylamid gel electrophoresis. The slowest migrating protein was identical to complex I (CP I), the P-700 chlorophyll a-protein, which possessed 60 chlorophyll a molecules per reaction center in Tribonema and 108 in Synura. The zone of intermediate mobility contained chlorophyll a and carotenoids. The absorption spectrum of this complex was very similar to the chlorophyll a-protein of photosystem II (CP a), which is known from green plants. The fastest migrating pigment protein zone was identified as a light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex. In Synura this protein was characterized by the content of chlorophyll c and of fucoxanthin. Therefore this complex will be named as LH Chl a/c-fucocanthin protein. In addition to the separation of the chlorophyll-protein complexes the cellular contents of P-700, cytochrome f (bound cytochrome) and cytochrome c-553 (soluble cytochrome) were measured. The stoichiometry of cytochrome f: cytochrome c-553:P-700 was found to be 1:4:2.4 in Tribonema and 1:6:3.4 in Synurá.

Citing Articles

Chlorophyll-protein-complexes of thylakoids of wild type and chlorophyll b mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana.

Ruhle W, Reilander H, Otto K, Wild A Photosynth Res. 2014; 4(4):301-5.

PMID: 24458523 DOI: 10.1007/BF00054138.


Chlorophyll-protein-complexes of thylakoids of wild type and chlorophyll b mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana.

Ruhle W, Reilander H, Otto K, Wild A Photosynth Res. 2014; 4(1):301-5.

PMID: 24458410 DOI: 10.1007/BF00041827.

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