Photoacoustic spectra (PAS) were obtained for the cyanobacterium Synechococcus (Anacystis nidulans) cells embedded in isotropic and stretched polyvinyl alcohol films. The polarized radiation with the electric vector changing in 30° intervals with respect to given direction in a sample plane was used. Two cyanobacterium strains, one with very low biliprotein content, second with normal amount of biliproteins were investigated. The polarized absorption and fluorescence spectra were also measured. Conclusions were drawn about the thermal deactivation occurring in differently oriented pools of chromophores and about mutual orientation of their transition moments. Thermal deactivation in carotenoids (Cars) of both strains was different. The ratio of Car thermal deactivation to the thermal deactivation of chlorophyll (Chl) was higher in cyanobacteria with lower content of biliproteins than in the strain with normal amount of these complexes. Hence biliproteins can play the role in excitation energy transfer from Cars to Chls. For complex biological samples, polarized PAS can be a more sensitive method to investigate the directions of the absorption transition moments than the widely used polarized absorption spectra. and A. Planner ... [et al.].
The photosynthetic bacteria (Rhodospirillum rubrum, Synechococcus and Anabaena variabilis) as well as their fragments embedded in isotropic and anisotropic polymer film were investigated. The orientation of photosynthetic pigments inside these organisms was compared, on the basis of the polarised absorption and fluorescence spectra, with the macroscopic orientation of investigated objects seen under microscope. The anisotropy of fluorescence was much higher than anisotropy of absorption. It showed strong influence of the photoselection by polarised radiation on the various bacterial chromophores exhibiting different orientations in the cells and various yields of fluorescence. The dimensions of cells were investigated on the basis of their photographs and by the scattering of the monochromatic radiation. and A. Planner ... [et al.].