Dictionary Definition
chlorophyll n : any of a group of green pigments
found in photosynthetic organisms [syn: chlorophyl]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /klɒɹəʊfəɫ/
Noun
- Any of a group of green pigments that are found in the chloroplasts of plants and in other photosynthetic organisms such as cyanobacteria
Translations
green pigment
- Arabic: (klūrūfīl)
- Bosnian: hlorofil
- Bulgarian: хлорофил
- Chinese: 叶绿素 (yè lǜ sù)
- Croatian: klorofil
- Czech: chlorofyl
- Danish: klorofyl
- Finnish: lehtivihreä, klorofylli
- German: Chlorophyll
- Italian: clorofilla
- Japanese: クロロフィル; 葉緑素 (old term)
- Korean: 엽록소 (yeoprokso)
- Latvian: hlorofils
- Macedonian: хлорофил
- Persian: (sebzīneh), (klorofīl)
- Russian: хлорофилл
- Serbian:
- Slovene: klorofil
- Swedish: klorofyll, bladgrönt
- Turkish: klorofil
Extensive Definition
Chlorophyll is a green pigment found in most plants, algae, and cyanobacteria. Its name is
derived from Greek:
chloros = green and
phyllon = leaf. Chlorophyll
absorbs light most strongly in the blue and red but poorly in the
green portions of the electromagnetic
spectrum, hence the green color of chlorophyll-containing
tissues like plant leaves.
Chlorophyll and photosynthesis
Chlorophyll is vital for photosynthesis, which allows plants to obtain energy from light.Chlorophyll molecules are specifically arranged
in and around pigment protein complexes called photosystems which are
embedded in the thylakoid membranes of
chloroplasts. In
these complexes, chlorophyll serves two primary functions. The
function of the vast majority of chlorophyll (up to several hundred
per photosystem) is to absorb light and transfer that light energy
by resonance
energy transfer to a specific chlorophyll pair in the reaction
center of the photosystems. Because of chlorophyll’s
selectivity regarding the wavelength of light it absorbs, areas of
a leaf containing the molecule will appear green.
There are currently two accepted photosystem
units, Photosystem II and Photosystem I, which have their own
distinct reaction center chlorophylls, named P680 and P700,
respectively. These pigments are named after the wavelength (in
nanometers) 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. Once extracted from the protein into a solvent
(such as acetone or
methanol), these
chlorophyll pigments can be separated in a simple paper
chromatography experiment, and, based on the number of polar groups
between chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b, will chemically separate
out on the paper.
The function of the reaction center chlorophyll
is to use the energy absorbed by and transferred to it from the
other chlorophyll pigments in the photosystems to undergo a charge
separation, a specific redox reaction in which the
chlorophyll donates an electron into a series of
molecular intermediates called an electron
transport chain. The charged reaction center chlorophyll
(P680+) is then reduced back to its ground state by accepting an
electron. In Photosystem II, the electron which reduces P680+
ultimately comes from the oxidation of water into O2 and H+ through
several intermediates. This reaction is how photosynthetic
organisms like 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, via many intermediates in the
thylakoid membrane, by electrons 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 shuttle H+ ions across the
thylakoid membrane, setting up a chemiosmotic potential
mainly used to produce ATP
chemical energy, and those electrons ultimately reduce NADP+ to
NADPH a
universal reductant used
to reduce CO2 into sugars as well as for other biosynthetic
reductions.
Reaction center chlorophyll-protein complexes are
capable of directly absorbing light and performing charge
separation events without other chlorophyll pigments, but the
absorption cross section (the likelihood of absorbing a photon
under a given light intensity) is small. Thus, the remaining
chlorophylls in the photosystem and antenna pigment protein
complexes associated with the photosystems 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
Chlorophyll is a chlorin pigment, which is structurally similar to and produced through the same metabolic pathway as other porphyrin pigments such as heme. At the center of the chlorin ring is a magnesium ion. The chlorin ring can have several different side chains, usually including a long phytol chain. There are a few different forms that occur naturally, but the most widely distributed form in terrestrial plants is chlorophyll a. The general structure of chlorophyll a was elucidated by Hans Fischer in 1940, and by 1960, when most of the stereochemistry of chlorophyll a was known, Robert Burns Woodward published a total synthesis of the molecule as then known. In 1967, the last remaining stereochemical elucidation was completed by Ian Fleming, and in 1990 Woodward and co-authors published an updated synthesis.The different structures of chlorophyll are
summarized below: