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Gardening > Learning About Plants > cyclic electron...
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cyclic electron trans****t in bacterial photosynthesis

by Catharina Coenen <ccoenen@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 4, 2008 at 07:27 PM

Can someone please help me understand the following statement from 
Raven et al. Biology 8th edition (p. 153) on cyclic 
photophos****ylation in sulfur bacteria:

"The hydrogen atoms extracted from H2S are used as a source of 
protons for driving ATP pumps and are not available to join carbon. 
Bacteria that are restricted to this process therefore must scavenge 
hydrogens from other sources, an inefficient undertaking."

My old edition of Gottschalk Bacterial Metabolism states that 
"reduced sulfur compounds are preferentially used as H-donors by 
[phototrophic bacteria]" for CO2 reduction.

And Brock's Microbiology, (2006, p. 542) states that "Reducing power 
(NADH) [....] for purple sulfur bacteria [...] usually comes from H2S
[...]."

Am I misreading Raven et al. somehow, or is their explanation in 
contradiction to the Microbiology textbooks?

Thanks for any clarification you can provide,

Catharina


*********************************************************************************************
Dr. Catharina Coenen
Associate Professor of Biology

Biology Department              phone: (814) 332-2703
Allegheny College               FAX:    (814) 332-2789
520 N Main Street
Meadville, PA 16335             e-mail:         ccoenen@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                            
http://webpub.allegheny.edu/employee/c/ccoenen/
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 1 Posts in Topic:
cyclic electron transport in bacterial photosynthesis
Catharina Coenen <ccoe  2008-03-04 19:27:09 

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tan12V112 Sat Jul 19 9:22:46 CDT 2008.