Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harvesting antenna, the chlorosome, that contains hundreds of thousands of bacteriochlorophyll molecules, allowing these bacteria to grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochlorophyll molecule per day. In contrast to other photosynthetic light harvesting antenna systems, for which A protein scaffold imposes the proper positioning of the chromophores with respect to each other, in chlorosomes, this is accomplished solely by self-assembly. This has aroused enormous interest in the structure function relations of these assemblies, as they can serve as blueprints for artificial light harvesting systems. In spite of these ...
Chlorosomes are the largest and most efficient natural light-harvesting systems and contain supramol...
AbstractChlorosomes of green photosynthetic bacteria constitute the most efficient light harvesting ...
We theoretically investigate the possibility to use single-object spectroscopy to probe size variati...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
AbstractGreen-sulfur bacteria have evolved a unique light-harvesting apparatus, the chlorosome, by w...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Chlorosomes are the largest and most efficient natural light-harvesting systems and contain supramol...
AbstractChlorosomes of green photosynthetic bacteria constitute the most efficient light harvesting ...
We theoretically investigate the possibility to use single-object spectroscopy to probe size variati...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Among all photosynthetic organisms, green bacteria have evolved one of the most efficient light-harv...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
AbstractGreen-sulfur bacteria have evolved a unique light-harvesting apparatus, the chlorosome, by w...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Green sulfur bacteria can grow photosynthetically by absorbing only a few photons per bacteriochloro...
Chlorosomes are the largest and most efficient natural light-harvesting systems and contain supramol...
AbstractChlorosomes of green photosynthetic bacteria constitute the most efficient light harvesting ...
We theoretically investigate the possibility to use single-object spectroscopy to probe size variati...