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2.5.1 Purple bacteria

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Purple bacteria are anoxygenic phototrophs that are extremely versatile metabolically (Hunter et al., 2009 and refs. therein). Many species can grow photoautotrophically, photoheterotrophically, fermentatively, or by either aerobic or anaerobic respiration. Other species are less versatile. Interestingly, many nonphototrophic bacteria are found in the bacterial phylum that includes the purple bacteria, which is known as the proteobacteria. The nonphototrophic proteobacteria include many familiar bacteria such as E. coli.

In nature, purple bacteria are very widely distributed, especially in anaerobic environments such as sewage treatment ponds. Purple bacteria can use a wide variety of reductants as electron donors, including H2S or other sulfur‐containing compounds, a variety of organic compounds, or even H2.

An electron micrograph of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus is shown in Fig. 2.3. The cover of this book shows a model of the intracytoplasmic membrane of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides.

Purple bacteria have been the subject of detailed structural and spectroscopic studies, making them the best understood of all phototrophic organisms in terms of energy collection and primary electron transfer processes. Almost all species contain bacteriochlorophyll a, while a few instead contain bacteriochlorophyll b.


Figure 2.3 Thin section transmission electron micrograph of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus. The diameter of the cell is about 1 μm.

Source: Courtesy of Steven J. Schmitt and Michael T. Madigan.

The purple bacteria are subdivided into sulfur and nonsulfur groups, depending on the range of ability to metabolize reduced sulfur compounds (Frigaard and Dahl, 2009). However, the terms sulfur and nonsulfur are somewhat misleading because all purple bacteria have the capability to carry out extensive sulfur metabolism. Most purple bacteria use the Calvin–Benson cycle, also known as the reductive pentose phosphate cycle for CO2 fixation.

The “purple” name comes from the color found in many of the common species, which results from the combination of bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoids. Representative species include Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Rhodospirillum rubrum, Allochromatium vinosum, and Blastochloris viridis (formerly known as Rhodopseudomonas viridis). Some of these organisms are not in fact purple in color, such as Blc. viridis, which is a greenish color, as its name suggests.

When grown aerobically, most species of purple bacteria derive their energy from aerobic respiration and completely repress pigment synthesis and expression of the structural proteins involved in photosynthetic energy conversion. Photosynthesis is therefore only observed if the cells are grown under anaerobic conditions. Under these conditions, the ultrastructure of the cytoplasmic membrane changes dramatically and invaginates in toward the cell cytoplasm in vesicles, tubes, or lamellae, which are then called intracytoplasmic membranes. The photosynthetic apparatus is localized in these intracytoplasmic membranes.

One group of purple bacteria, known as aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs (AAP), has the opposite pattern, in that they make pigments and carry out photosynthesis only under aerobic conditions (Yurkov and Beatty, 1998). This is counterintuitive, in that they seem to perform photosynthesis only when they don't really need to. It is not yet clear what advantage this pattern of metabolism gives these organisms. They are widely distributed and have been found throughout the open ocean (Kolber et al., 2001). This group of purple bacteria is not capable of autotrophic metabolism and cannot assimilate CO2 using the Calvin–Benson cycle. Instead, they grow using photoheterotrophic metabolism whereby organic matter from the environment is assimilated with the help of light energy.

Most purple phototrophic bacteria are capable of N2 fixation. In fact, certain classes of Rhizobia, the bacteria that live symbiotically in nodules of leguminous plants, contain bacteriochlorophyll and may actually use photosynthesis to supplement the energy requirements of nitrogen fixation (Fleischman and Kramer, 1998). Other Rhizobia do not express photosynthetic characteristics, but since they are proteobacteria, based on 16S rRNA analysis, they are therefore relatives of purple phototrophic bacteria.

Molecular Mechanisms of Photosynthesis

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