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SIMILARITIES IN THE INDUCTION OF SYNTHESIS OF A CELL‐SURFACE POLYPEPTIDE IN Arthrobacter sp . BY NEAR‐UV IRRADIATION and PHOTODYNAMIC CONDITIONS
Author(s) -
Hoober J. Kenneth,
Franzi Joseph
Publication year - 1983
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.1751-1097.1983.tb04492.x
Subject(s) - hemin , methylene blue , photochemistry , cationic polymerization , visible spectrum , porphyrin , rose bengal , chemistry , irradiation , photosensitizer , photodynamic therapy , protoporphyrin ix , enzyme , heme , organic chemistry , photocatalysis , catalysis , materials science , physics , optoelectronics , nuclear physics
Irradiation of aerobic suspensions of Arthrobacter sp. with near‐UV light (310‐400 nm) induced synthesis of a 21 000 dalton, cell‐surface polypeptide. Synthesis of this polypeptide also was induced by visible light in the presence of photodynamic dyes, as shown previously (Hoober, 1978). Induction of the polypeptide in near‐UV light and with visible light plus dyes was inhibited by histidine. Hemin inhibited induction in near‐UV light and in visible light with methylene blue, neutral red and acrifiavin, which are cationic dyes, but failed to inhibit induction in visible light with rose bengal, an anionic dye. These results suggested that inhibition by hemin required electrostatically favored interaction between the anionic porphyrin and the sensitizer, and that the near‐UV light effect was mediated by a cationic or neutral endogenous sensitizer. The similarities in the responses of the cells to near‐UV irradiation and visible light plus dyes suggested that the mechanism of induction under the two conditions was the same.

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