Chlorophyll
Chlorophyll is any of several related green pigments found in cyanobacteria and in the chloroplasts of algae and plants. Its name is derived from the Greek words and . Chlorophyll allow plants to absorb energy from light.
Chlorophylls
absorb light most strongly in the blue portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
as well as the red portion. Conversely, it is a poor absorber of green and
near-green portions of the spectrum. Hence chlorophyll-containing tissues
appear green because green light, diffusively reflected by structures like cell
walls, is less absorbed.
History
Chlorophyll
was first isolated and named by Joseph Bienaimé Caventou and Pierre Joseph
Pelletier in 1817.
The presence
of magnesium in chlorophyll was discovered in 1906, and was the first detection
of that element in living tissue.
After
initial work done by German chemist Richard Willstätter spanning from 1905 to
1915, the general structure of chlorophyll a was elucidated by Hans Fischer in
1940. By 1960, when most of the stereochemistry of chlorophyll a was known,
Robert Burns Woodward published a total synthesis of the molecule. In 1967, the
last remaining stereochemical elucidation was completed by Ian Fleming, and in
1990 Woodward and co-authors published an updated synthesis. Chlorophyll f was
announced to be present in cyanobacteria and other oxygenic microorganisms that
form stromatolites in 2010; a molecular formula of C55H70O6N4Mg and a structure
of -chlorophyll a were deduced based on NMR, optical and mass spectra.
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll
is vital for photosynthesis, which allows plants to absorb energy from light.
Chlorophyll
molecules are arranged in and around photosystems that are embedded in the
thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts. In these complexes, chlorophyll serves
three functions:
# The
function of the vast majority of chlorophyll is to absorb light.
# Having
done so, these same centers execute their second function: The transfer of that
energy by resonance energy transfer to a specific chlorophyll pair in the
reaction center of the photosystems.
# This
specific pair performs the final function of chlorophylls: Charge separation,
which produces the unbound protons and electrons that separately propel
biosynthesis.
The two
currently accepted photosystem units are and which have their own distinct
reaction centres, named P700 and P680, respectively. These centres are named
after the wavelength of their red-peak absorption maximum. The identity,
function and spectral properties of the types of chlorophyll in each
photosystem are distinct and determined by each other and the protein structure
surrounding them.
The function
of the reaction center of chlorophyll is to absorb light energy and transfer it
to other parts of the photosystem. The absorbed energy of the photon is
transferred to an electron in a process called charge separation. The removal
of the electron from the chlorophyll is an oxidation reaction. The chlorophyll
donates the high energy electron to a series of molecular intermediates called
an electron transport chain. The charged reaction center of chlorophyll is then
reduced back to its ground state by accepting an electron stripped from water.
The electron that reduces P680+ ultimately comes from the oxidation of water
into O2 and H+ through several intermediates. This reaction is how photosynthetic
organisms such as plants produce O2 gas, and is the source for practically all
the O2 in Earth's atmosphere. Photosystem I typically works in series with
Photosystem II; thus the P700+ of Photosystem I is usually reduced as it
accepts the electron, via many intermediates in the thylakoid membrane, by
electrons coming, ultimately, from Photosystem II. Electron transfer reactions
in the thylakoid membranes are complex, however, and the source of electrons
used to reduce P700+ can vary.
The electron
flow produced by the reaction center chlorophyll pigments is used to pump H+
ions across the thylakoid membrane, setting up a proton-motive force a
chemiosmotic potential used mainly in the production of ATP or to reduce NADP+
to NADPH. NADPH is a universal agent used to reduce CO2 into sugars as well as
other biosynthetic reactions.
Reaction
center chlorophyll–protein complexes are capable of directly absorbing light
and performing charge separation events without the assistance of other
chlorophyll pigments, but the probability of that happening under a given light
intensity is small. Thus, the other chlorophylls in the photosystem and antenna
pigment proteins all cooperatively absorb and funnel light energy to the
reaction center. Besides chlorophyll a, there are other pigments, called
accessory pigments, which occur in these pigment–protein antenna complexes.
Chemical structure
Several
chlorophylls are known. All are defined as derivatives of the parent chlorin by
the presence of a fifth, ketone-containing ring beyond the four pyrrole-like
rings. Most chlorophylls are classified as chlorins, which are reduced
relatives of porphyrins. They share a common biosynthetic pathway with
porphyrins, including the precursor uroporphyrinogen III. Unlike hemes, which contain
iron bound to the N4 center, most chlorophylls bind magnesium. The axial
ligands attached to the Mg2+ center are often omitted for clarity. Appended to
the chlorin ring are various side chains, usually including a long phytyl
chain. The most widely distributed form in terrestrial plants is chlorophyll a.
The only difference between chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b is that the former
has a methyl group where the latter has a formyl group. This difference causes
a considerable difference in the absorption spectrum, allowing plants to absorb
a greater portion of visible light.
The
structures of chlorophylls are summarized below:
chlorophyll
a.svg chlorophyll a
chlorophyll
b.svg chlorophyll b
chlorophyll
c1.svg chlorophyll c1
chlorophyll
c2.svg chlorophyll c2
Chlorophyll
d.svg chlorophyll d
Chlorophyll
f_vert.svg chlorophyll f
Chlorophyll
e is reserved for a pigment that has been extracted from algae in 1966 but not
chemically described. Besides the lettered chlophylls, a wide variety of
sidechain modifications to the chlorophyll structures are known in the wild.
For example, Prochlorococcus, a cyanobacterium, uses 8-vinyl Chl a and b.
Measurement
of chlorophyll content
Chlorophylls
can be extracted from the protein into organic solvents. In this way, the
concentration of chlorophyll within a leaf can be estimated. Methods also exist
to separate chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b.
In diethyl
ether, chlorophyll a has approximate absorbance maxima of 430 nm and 662 nm,
while chlorophyll b has approximate maxima of 453 nm and 642 nm. The absorption
peaks of chlorophyll a are at 465 nm and 665 nm. Chlorophyll a fluoresces at
673 nm and 726 nm. The peak molar absorption coefficient of chlorophyll a
exceeds 105 M−1 cm−1, which is among the highest for small-molecule organic
compounds. In 90% acetone-water, the peak absorption wavelengths of chlorophyll
a are 430 nm and 664 nm; peaks for chlorophyll b are 460 nm and 647 nm; peaks
for chlorophyll c1 are 442 nm and 630 nm; peaks for chlorophyll c2 are 444 nm
and 630 nm; peaks for chlorophyll d are 401 nm, 455 nm and 696 nm.
Ratio
fluorescence emission can be used to measure chlorophyll content. By exciting
chlorophyll a fluorescence at a lower wavelength, the ratio of chlorophyll
fluorescence emission at and can provide a linear relationship of chlorophyll
content when compared with chemical testing. The ratio F735/F700 provided a
correlation value of r2 0.96 compared with chemical testing in the range from
41 mg m−2 up to 675 mg m−2. Gitelson also developed a formula for direct
readout of chlorophyll content in mg m−2. The formula provided a reliable
method of measuring chlorophyll content from 41 mg m−2 up to 675 mg m−2 with a
correlation r2 value of 0.95.
Biosynthesis
In some
plants, chlorophyll is derived from glutamate and is synthesised along a
branched biosynthetic pathway that is shared with heme and siroheme.
Chlorophyll
synthase is the enzyme that completes the biosynthesis of chlorophyll a:
This
converion forms an ester of the carboxylic acid group in chlorophyllide a with
the 20-carbon diterpene alcohol phytol. Chlorophyll b is made by the same
enzyme acting on chlorophyllide b. The same is known for chlorophyll d and f,
both made from corresponding chlorophyllides ultimately made from
chlorophyllide a.
In
Angiosperm plants, the later steps in the biosynthetic pathway are
light-dependent. Such plants are pale if grown in darkness. Non-vascular plants
and green algae have an additional light-independent enzyme and grow green even
in darkness.
Chlorophyll
is bound to proteins. Protochlorophyllide, one of the biosynthetic
intermediates, occurs mostly in the free form and, under light conditions, acts
as a photosensitizer, forming free radicals, which can be toxic to the plant.
Hence, plants regulate the amount of this chlorophyll precursor. In
angiosperms, this regulation is achieved at the step of aminolevulinic acid,
one of the intermediate compounds in the biosynthesis pathway. Plants that are
fed by ALA accumulate high and toxic levels of protochlorophyllide; so do the
mutants with a damaged regulatory system.
Senescence and the chlorophyll cycle
The process
of plant senescence involves the degradation of chlorophyll: for example the
enzyme chlorophyllase hydrolyses the phytyl sidechain to reverse the reaction
in which chlorophylls are biosynthesised from chlorophyllide a or b. Since
chlorophyllide a can be converted to chlorophyllide b and the latter can be
re-esterified to chlorophyll b, these processes allow cycling between
chlorophylls a and b. Moreover, chlorophyll b can be directly reduced back to
chlorophyll a, completing the cycle.
In later
stages of senescence, chlorophyllides are converted to a group of colourless
tetrapyrroles known as nonfluorescent chlorophyll catabolites with the general
structure:
These
compounds have also been identified in ripening fruits and they give
characteristic autumn colours to deciduous plants.
Distribution
The
chlorophyll maps show milligrams of chlorophyll per cubic meter of seawater
each month. Places where chlorophyll amounts were very low, indicating very low
numbers of phytoplankton, are blue. Places where chlorophyll concentrations
were high, meaning many phytoplankton were growing, are yellow. The
observations come from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on
NASA's Aqua satellite. Land is dark gray, and places where MODIS could not
collect data because of sea ice, polar darkness, or clouds are light gray. The
highest chlorophyll concentrations, where tiny surface-dwelling ocean plants
are thriving, are in cold polar waters or in places where ocean currents bring
cold water to the surface, such as around the equator and along the shores of
continents. It is not the cold water itself that stimulates the phytoplankton.
Instead, the cool temperatures are often a sign that the water has welled up to
the surface from deeper in the ocean, carrying nutrients that have built up
over time. In polar waters, nutrients accumulate in surface waters during the
dark winter months when plants cannot grow. When sunlight returns in the spring
and summer, the plants flourish in high concentrations.
Culinary use
Synthetic
chlorophyll is registered as a food additive colorant, and its E number is
E140. Chefs use chlorophyll to color a variety of foods and beverages green,
such as pasta and spirits. Absinthe gains its green color naturally from the
chlorophyll introduced through the large variety of herbs used in its
production. Chlorophyll is not soluble in water, and it is first mixed with a
small quantity of vegetable oil to obtain the desired solution.
Biological
use
A 2002 study
found that "leaves exposed to strong light contained degraded major
antenna proteins, unlike those kept in the dark, which is consistent with
studies on the illumination of isolated proteins". This appeared to the
authors as support for the hypothesis that "active oxygen species play a
role in vivo" in the short-term behaviour of plants.
See also
Bacteriochlorophyll,
related compounds in phototrophic bacteria
Chlorophyllin,
a semi-synthetic derivative of chlorophyll
Deep
chlorophyll maximum
Chlorophyll
fluorescence, to measure plant stress
References
Bibliography:
Wikipedia
@baygross