Journal
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 174, Issue 3, Pages 181-188Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s002030000194
Keywords
Acaryochloris marina; carboxysomes; cell envelope; cyanobacteria; freeze fractures; oxyphotobacteria; photosystems; phycobiliproteins; prochlorophytes; thylakoid membranes
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We present a detailed investigation of the ultrastructure of the chlorophyll aid-containing unicellular oxyphotobacterium Acaryochloris marina, combining light and transmission electron microscopy and showing freeze fractures of this organism for the first time. The cells were 1.8-2.1 mu mx1.5-1.7 mu m in size. The cell envelope consisted of a peptidoglycan layer of approximately 10 nm thickness combined with an outer membrane. Cell division was intermediate between the constrictive and the septum type. The nucleoplasm, which contained several carboxysomes, was surrounded by 7-11 concentrically arranged thylakoids, which were predominantly stacked, with the exception of distinct areas where phycobiliproteins were located. The thylakoids were perforated by channel-like structures connecting the central and peripheral portions of the cytoplasm and not yet observed in other organisms. In freeze fractures, the protoplasmic fracture faces of thylakoid membranes were densely covered with particles of inhomogenous size. The particle size histogram peaked at 10-11, 13 and 18 nm. The 18-nm particles are assumed to represent photosystem I trimers. The particles on exoplasmic fracture faces, proposed to represent photosystem II complexes, were significantly larger than the corresponding particles of cyanobacteria and clustered to form large aggregates. This kind of arrangement is unique among photosynthetic organisms.
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