A
Chlorosome is a photosynthetic
antenna complex found in
green sulfur bacteria (GSB) and some green filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs (FAP) (Chloroflexaceae, Oscillochloridaceae). They differ from other antenna complexes by their large size and lack of
protein matrix supporting the photosynthetic pigments.
Green sulfur bacteria are a group of organisms that generally live in extremely low-light environments, such as at depths of 100 metres in the
Black Sea. The ability to capture light energy and rapidly deliver it to where it needs to go is essential to these bacteria, some of which see only a few
photons of light per
chlorophyll per day. To achieve this, the bacteria contain chlorosome structures, which contain up to 250,000
chlorophyll molecules. Chlorosomes are ellipsoidal bodies, in GSB their length varies from 100 to 200 nm, width of 50-100 nm and height of 15 - 30 nm, in FAP the chlorosomes are somewhat smaller.