Plant Biol (Stuttg) 1999; 1(5): 516-523
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-978546
Original Papers

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Biochemical and Immunochemical Investigations on the Light-Harvesting System of the Cryptophyte Rhodomonas sp.: Evidence for a Photosystem I Specific Antenna

L. Bathke, E. Rhiel, W. E. Krumbein, J. Marquardt
  • ICBM/Geomikrobiologie, Carl von Ossietzky-Universität Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

1999

1999

Publication Date:
19 April 2007 (online)

Abstract

Thylakoid membranes of the Cryptophyte Rhodomonas sp. were solubilized with the mild detergent dodecyl-β-maltoside and subjected to sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The resulting gradients showed six pigment-bearing bands which were characterized further by means of absorption and fluorescence emission (77 K) spectroscopy, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western immunoblotting. Two of the bands showed characteristics of light-harvesting complexes, other bands could be attributed to photosystem II and photosystem I. Up to 10 different light-harvesting proteins could be identified, some of which are specific for photosystem I, others for photosystem II. The polypeptides of the light-harvesting complex of photosystem II show a higher chlorophyll c/a ratio than the antenna proteins of photosystem I. As in vascular plants, they represent the bulk of the membrane-intrinsic light-harvesting proteins.

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