Chloroplast ultrastructure of the alga Phaeocystis antarctica Karsten: A new structural model using electron tomography
MH Ellisman and GE Sosinsky
PS2001
3(1) -
Published: 2001
Abstract
Understanding the light-harvesting properties of algae and higher plants are a fundamental topic in photosynthesis research. Using thick sections obtained from fixed and embedded cultures of colonial P. antarctica, we calculate tomographic reconstructions of individual chloroplasts under light-limiting and saturating conditions for net photosynthesis. Our goal is to gain an understanding of the continuity of thylakoid membranes and understand the spatial relationship between the pyrenoid, the starch containing organelle, and thylakoid membranes. We found that Phaeocystis showed considerable morphological and physiological flexibility in response to environmental light levels. We found that the thylakoids generally run parallel to the chloroplast membrane with many junctures and bifurcations, many of which are in contact with the chloroplast membrane itself. The considerable flexibility in the thylakoid membranes allows for the accommodation of the pyrenoid structure. The arrangement of the thylakoids within these structures resemble those found in new structures of mitochondria cristae. We present a new structural model for algal chloroplasts which greatly revises current concepts of thylakoid membrane structure in relation to photoacclimation.https://doi.org/10.1071/SA0403106
© CSIRO 2001