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  • Article
    Broglie RM, Niederman RA.
    J Bacteriol. 1979 Jun;138(3):788-98.
    The effects of cerulenin were investigated in Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides to elucidate further the mechanisms controlling the assembly of the chromatophore membrane. When this potent inhibitor of fatty acid biosynthesis was added to photosynthetically grown cultures, there was an immediate cessation of phospholipid, bacteriochlorophyll a, carotenoid, and ubiquinone formation. Concurrently, there was also a marked decrease in the rate of incorporation of protein into the chromatophore membrane. In contrast, only a small decrease in the rate of soluble and cell envelope protein synthesis was observed and, in chemotrophically grown cells, protein continued to be incorporated into both the cytoplasmic and outer membranes. The removal of delta-aminolaevulinate from mutant H-5 of R. sphaeroides, which requires this porphyrin precursor, was reexamined to determine whether cerulenin-induced cessation of chromatophore protein incorporation was due solely to blocked bacteriochlorophyll a synthesis. In the deprived H-5 cells, inhibition of [35S]methionine incorporation into chromatophores was confined mainly to apoproteins of bacteriochlorophyll a complexes. Other minor chromatophore proteins continued to be inserted to a greater extent than in cerulenin-treated wild type where phospholipid synthesis has also ceased. These results indicated that the assembly of the chromatophore membrane is under strict regulatory control involving concomitant phospholipid, pigment, and protein syntheses.
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