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J. Bacteriol., Jan 1997, 24-30, Vol 179, No. 1
RN Grishanin, DE Gauden and JP Armitage
Rhodobacter sphaeroides responds to a decrease in light intensity by a
transient stop followed by adaptation. There is no measurable response to
increases in light intensity. We confirmed that photosynthetic electron
transport is essential for a photoresponse, as (i) inhibitors of
photosynthetic electron transport inhibit photoresponses, (ii) electron
transport to oxidases in the presence of oxygen reduces the photoresponse,
and (iii) the magnitude of the response is dependent on the photopigment
content of the cells. The photoresponses of cells grown in high light,
which have lower concentrations of light- harvesting photopigment and
reaction centers, saturated at much higher light intensities than the
photoresponses of cells grown in low light, which have high concentrations
of light-harvesting pigments and reaction centers. We examined whether the
primary sensory signal from the photosynthetic electron transport chain was
a change in the electrochemical proton gradient or a change in the rate of
electron transport itself (probably reflecting redox sensing). R.
sphaeroides showed no response to the addition of the proton ionophore
carbonyl cyanide 4-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone, which decreased the
electrochemical proton gradient, although a behavioral response was seen to
a reduction in light intensity that caused an equivalent reduction in
proton gradient. These results strongly suggest that (i) the photosynthetic
apparatus is the primary photoreceptor, (ii) the primary signal is
generated by a change in the rate of electron transport, (iii) the change
in the electrochemical proton gradient is not the primary photosensory
signal, and (iv) stimuli affecting electron transport rates integrate via
the electron transport chain.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Photoresponses in Rhodobacter sphaeroides: role of photosynthetic electron transport
Microbiology Unit, Biochemistry Department, University of Oxford, United Kingdom.
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