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RELATIONS BETWEEN PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND FLUORESCENCE IN CELLS AND EXTRACTS OF PHOTOSYNTHETIC BACTERIA *
Author(s) -
Clayton Roderick K.
Publication year - 1966
Publication title -
photochemistry and photobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.818
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1751-1097
pISSN - 0031-8655
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-1097.1966.tb05776.x
Subject(s) - bacteriochlorophyll , photochemistry , rhodospirillum rubrum , fluorescence , purple bacteria , photosynthesis , quantum yield , photosynthetic reaction centre , quenching (fluorescence) , chemistry , population , chromatophore , electron transfer , biology , physics , optics , biochemistry , demography , sociology , enzyme , fishery
— Light‐induced changes in the yield of bacteriochlorophyll fluorescence have been measured in cells and chromatophores of photosynthetic bacteria, and coordinated with light‐induced absorbancy changes. Comparisons were drawn during transitions between dark and light steady states and also between steady states established at different light intensities. Aerobic cell suspensions of Rhodospirillum rubrum, Rhodopseudomonas spheroides, Chromatium and Rhodopseudomonas sp. NHTC 133 showed a strict correspondence between changes in the fluorescence yield and the bleaching of P870 (P985 in Rps . sp. NHTC 133), as reported by Vredenberg and Duysens for R. rubrum cells. The relationship shows that singlet excitation energy in bacteriochlorophyll is quenched by P870 at a rate proportional to the concentration of unbleached P870. This implies that the photosynthetic units are not independent with respect to energy transfer. In anaerobic cell suspensions the change in fluorescence did not follow the bleaching of P870 in the manner described by Vredenberg and Duysens. Here a change in fluorescence may have resulted from the reduction of a primary photochemical electron acceptor as well as from the oxidation (bleaching) of P870. In chromatophore preparations there were further deviations from the Vredenberg and Duysens relationship which could be attributed to changes in the rate constants for quenching of singlet excitation energy. Finally there was a light‐induced increase in the fluorescence yield which was related to a band shift of bacteriochlorophyll and not to the bleaching of P870. Aerobic cell suspensions presented a limiting case in which these complications were absent. No change in the fluorescence was associated uniquely with the oxidation of cytochrome or band shifts of carotenoid pigments. These results, when coordinated with earlier findings about the fluorescence of bacteriochlorophyll and P870, indicate that the singlet excitation quantum is the only energy carrier linking the absorption of light with the initiation of photochemistry in bacterial photosynthesis.

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