Photophosphorylation and oxidative phosphorylation in intact cells and chromatophores of an aerobic photosynthetic bacterium, Erythrobacter sp. strain OCh114.

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Light-induced ATP synthesis was studied in intact cells and chromatophores of Erythrobacter sp. strain OCh114. ATP synthesis was measured by both the pH method and the luciferin-luciferase luminescence method. The rate of ATP synthesis was moderate (a typical value of 0.65 mol of ATP per mol of bacteriochlorophyll per min), and synthesis was inhibited by antimycin A. ATP was synthesized under illumination only under aerobic conditions and not under anaerobic conditions. This characteristic was similar to that of other light-induced energy transduction processes in this bacterial species, such as oxidation of reaction center, oxidation of cytochrome c551, and translocation of H+, which were not observed under anaerobic conditions. This phenomenon was reconciled with the fact that the Erythrobacter sp. could not grow anaerobically even in the light. The characteristics of oxidative phosphorylation and ATP hydrolysis were also investigated. The respiratory ratio of chromatophores was 2.3. Typical rates of oxidative phosphorylation by NADH and by succinate were 2.9 mol of ATP per mol of bacteriochlorophyll per min (P/O = 0.22) and 1.1 mol of ATP per mol of bacteriochlorophyll per min (P/O = 0.19), respectively. A typical rate of ATP hydrolysis was 0.25 mol of ATP per mol of bacteriochlorophyll per min in chromatophores. ATPase and adenylate kinase are also involved in the metabolism of adenine nucleotides in this bacterium.

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