These photosynthetic bacteria have no respiratory
machinery for converting extra NADH into ATP. However, they can
control the relative amount of ATP and NADH they make by a kind
of "short circuit” of photosynthesis. The process diagrammed
on the previous page is called noncyclic photophosphorylation,
since ADP is phosphorylated to ATP by light energy, without recycling
electrons. Reducing power is continually used in making NADH,
so an external source of reducing power is constantly needed.
The bacteria also can send their electrons back around the circuit,
passing them to cytochrome b6, and from there to some
member of the original electron-transport chain. This process
is termed cyclic photophosphorylation (right), and requires
no H2S but consequently produces no NADH. It appears
to have an extra site of ATP synthesis to take advantage of the
larger free energy drop between excited and unexcited chlorophyll.
The mix between the noncyclic and the cyclic processes depends
on the bacterium's relative need at the time for simple energy,
or for reducing power for synthesis.
The other class of photosynthetic bacteria is the
purple nonsulfur bacteria, which do not use H2S as
a source of reducing power, and manage quite well with cyclic
photophosphorylation. This may be possible because they have made
a marvelous invention: They have a citric acid cycle and respiratory
machinery, and can function quite well as oxygen respirers if
kept in the dark, although they much prefer to obtain their ATP
energy from photosynthesis. When operating photosynthetically,
they apparently use NADH from the citric acid cycle as one source
of reducing power for synthesis.