Studies on the role of carotenoid pigments in a chemoheterotrophic bacterium, corynebacterium poinsettiae.

Autor: Kunisawa, Riyo, Stanier, R.
Zdroj: Archiv für Mikrobiologie; Mar1958, Vol. 31 Issue 1, p146-156, 11p
Abstrakt: The hypothesis that colored carotenoids can protect chemoheterotrophic microorganisms from damage by visible light has been investigated. Corynebacterium poinsettiae, a bacterium that forms the three carotenoid pigments lycoxanthin, cryptoxanthin and spirilloxanthin, was used as test organism. Non-pigmented cells, in which the normal carotenoids were largely replaced by the colorless C polyene, phytoene, were obtained by two methods: isolation of a mutant with a block in carotenoid synthesis; and cultivation of the parent strain in the presence of diphenylamine, a specific chemical inhibitor of carotenoid synthesis. Comparative studies of the effects of visible light on dye-sensitized pigmented and non-pigmented cells showed that non-pigmented cells can be rapidly killed by exposures which are without effect on pigmented cells. Both physiological and genetic suppression of pigment synthesis produce photosensitivity. The non-pigmented mutant is killed by ultraviolet light at the same rate as the pigmented parent strain, indicating that the acquired photosensitivity of the former is specific for visible light. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index