The
green sulfur bacteria are a
family of obligately
anaerobic photoautotrophic bacteria. Most closely related to the distant
Bacteroidetes, they are accordingly
assigned their own
phylum.
Green sulfur bacteria are non-
motile (except
Chloroherpeton thalassium, which may
glide) and come in spheres, rods, and
spirals.
Photosynthesis is achieved
using
bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)
c,
d, or
e, in addition to BChl
a and
chlorophyll a,
in
chlorosomes attached to the membrane.
They use
sulfide ions,
hydrogen or
ferrous
iron as an
electron donor and the
process is mediated by the type I
reaction centre and
Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex.
Elemental
sulfur deposited outside the cell
may be further oxidized. By contrast, the photosynthesis in plants
uses water as electron donor and produces oxygen.
Chlorobium tepidum has emerged
as a
model organism for the group,
and although only ten
genomes have been
sequenced, these are quite comprehensive of the family's
biodiversity. Their 2-3
Mb genomes
encode 1750-2800
genes,
1400-1500 of which are common to all strains. The apparent absence
of two-component
histidine-
kinases and
response
regulators suggest limited
phenotypic plasticity. Their small
dependence on
organic molecule
transporters and
transcription
factors also indicate that these organisms are adapted to a
narrow range of energy-limited conditions, an
ecology shared with the simpler
cyanobacteria,
Prochlorococcus and
Synechococcus
A species
of green sulfur bacteria has been found living near a black smoker off the coast of Mexico
at a depth
of 2,500 meters beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean
. At this depth, the bacterium, designated
GSB1, lives off the dim glow of the thermal vent since no sunlight
can penetrate to that depth.
Green
sulfur bacteria appear in Lake Matano
, Indonesia, at a depth of approximately 110-120
meters. The population may include the species,
Chlorobium ferrooxidans.
See also
Notes, links and References
External links
References
Footnotes