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Oxygenic photosynthetic machineries

Oxygenic photosynthesis produces most of the organic matter on Earth, as well as almost all of its oxygen. The primary steps of this process are carried out within intricate lamellar systems called thylakoid networks. These specialized membranes host the proteins and cofactors necessary for conducting the light-driven reactions of photosynthesis as well for the regulation and repair of the photosynthetic machinery. We are interested in how the photosynthetic and the auxiliary regulatory proteins are organized in the thylakoid membranes, how the membranes are organized within the cell (cyanobacteria) or the chloroplast (algae and plants), and how the organization of both is remodeled by light conditions and other environmental parameters. In addition, we are interested in the formation and differentiation of thylakoid membranes during plastid development in higher plants, as well as their disintegration and recycling during senescence. To study these, we combine various microscopy techniques, including electron tomography, freeze-fracture, ion-abrasion scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and optical microscopy, with spectroscopic, biochemical and transcriptomic analyses.

plastid differentiation in the shoot apex monitored by chlorophyll fluorescence
disassembly and membrane detachment of cyanobacterial phycobilisomes during high-light stress
a resurrection plant ( Craterostigma pumilum )


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