Synopses & Reviews
"Life Is Bottled Sunshine" [Wynwood Reade, Martyrdom of Man, 1924]. This inspired phrase is a four-word summary of the significance of photosynthesis for life on earth. The study of photosynthesis has attracted the attention of a legion of biologists, biochemists, chemists and physicists for over 200 years. Discoveries in Photosynthesis presents a sweeping overview of the history of photosynthesis investigations, and detailed accounts of research progress in all aspects of the most complex bioenergetic process in living organisms. Conceived of as a way of summarizing the history of research advances in photosynthesis as of millennium 2000, the book evolved into a majestic and encyclopedic saga involving all of the basic sciences. The book contains 111 papers, authored by 132 scientists from 19 countries. It includes overviews; timelines; tributes; minireviews on excitation energy transfer, reaction centers, oxygen evolution, light-harvesting and pigment-protein complexes, electron transport and ATP synthesis, techniques and applications, biogenesis and membrane architecture, reductive and assimilatory processes, transport, regulation and adaptation, Genetics, and Evolution; laboratories and national perspectives; and retrospectives that end in a list of photosynthesis symposia, books and conferences. Informal and formal photographs of scientists make it a wonderful book to have. This book is meant not only for the researchers and graduate students, but also for advanced undergraduates in Plant Biology, Microbiology, Cell Biology, Biochemistry, Biophysics and History of Science.
Review
From the reviews: "This book is a unique example of the tale of the historic development of a fascinating branch of contemporary science as told by the protagonists themselves. Professor Govindjee and his co-editors have done a magnificent work by producing an impressive lively picture of how the knowledge on Photosynthesis progressed during the twentieth century. The book will be of great value not only for the specialists of the subject but also for students and scholars interested in understanding the essence of the trial and error process governing modern science." (Giovanni Giacometti, Professor Emeritus of Physical Chemistry, Dept. of Chemical Sciences, University of Padova, Italy) "The book 'Discoveries in Photosynthesis', edited by Govindjee, J. Thomas Beatty, Howard Gest and John F. Allen, is a remarkable Encyclopedia of Research in Photosynthesis, its discoveries, and its difficulties during the last century. Biologists, biochemists, physicists and molecular biologists were involved with their successes, as well as their failures, in putting together today's overall picture of this uniquely important physiological process, on which life on this planet depends. This book should not be missed by anyone interested in photosynthesis: It is a must for all libraries around the World." (Giorgio Forti, Professor of Biology, University of Milano, Italy) "A wonderful collection of the most interesting articles on all aspects of photosynthesis. The personal perspectives are delightful, it is truly a "must own" book for its focus on the personal historical context surrounding most of the important breakthroughs in photosynthesis research." (Douglas Bruce, Professor of Biological Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada) "Discoveries in Photosynthesis, edited by Govindjee, J.T. Beatty, H. Gest and J.F. Allen, is a splendid compendium of the great leaps forward in the research on photosynthesis, paralleling the advances in technology for the study of the life sciences in general. From the early use of isotopes to the electron microscope, the mechanisms of solar energy conversion are defined by over 100 authors--A must reading for scholars in the field of plant sciences & of microbiology, as well as those interested in the history of science." (R. Clinton Fuller, Professor Emeritus, Department of Biochemistry, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA) "Congratulations on another volume in the Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration (AIPH) series. Govindjee's mentor Eugene Rabinowitch wrote the story of photosynthesis in the 1940s and 1950s. No one could ever hope to do that again; the amount of information is just too vast for any one person to ever hope to do a proper job of giving the real state of knowledge. However, Govindjee has really duplicated Rabinowitch's accomplishment in the only way it could be done nowadays, by enlisting editors who are expert in areas of the field and having them in turn enlist expert authors. When I look at the AIPH books on my shelf I am struck with how effectively they collectively summarize the field. I am continually impressed with how Govindjee has added new books to the series that make sense and really provide the level of detail that is needed." (Robert Blankenship, Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, USA) "Discoveries in Photosynthesis is easily among the most outstanding and valuable books published in the biological sciences in the last 100 years. ... The book is richly illustrated with nearly 800 photographs. In addition, there are many diagrams, tables and other supplementary material. I do not know of any comparable effort in the plant sciences or even the broader area of biology. ... Govindjee and his colleagues are to be congratulated for preparing this extraordinary book, indeed without a parallel." (S. C. Maheshwari, Current Science, Vol. 92 (2), January, 2007) "... It is an outstanding assembly of more than 100 articles: of personal reflections, of methods and approaches, of dedications and obituaries of those involved in the unravelling of photosynthesis, .... The amount of information in these recollections is impressive in this book, and almost a complete source for references for a decisive time in a scientific field. ... It is with nostalgic pleasure that I read and recall those years. This book is a mine for everybody who wants to know more than just pure facts and what is condensed into a few pages in the textbooks." (Professor Emeritus Achim Trebst, Bochum University, Bochum, Germany, February 2007) "Discoveries in Photosynthesis is a new edited volume out of the 'Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration' series ... . It is the first comprehensive scholarly attempt to gather original materials in order to understand the long and complex history of photosynthesis research. ... the volume is every inch as impressive as its important subject demands. ... Its coverage and perspectives are equally vast ... . It is, in short, a monumental effort." (Vassiliki Betty Smocovitis, Plant Science Bulletin, Vol. 53 (1), 2007) "History of research is very important and much time of young researchers would be spared if they would know what had been done, in some cases many years ago. ... 112 review articles were published once more in one, very thick book. ... scientists interested in photosynthesis this volume is certainly an important material to have on the book shelf." (Z.
Review
From the reviews:
"This book is a unique example of the tale of the historic development of a fascinating branch of contemporary science as told by the protagonists themselves. Professor Govindjee and his co-editors have done a magnificent work by producing an impressive lively picture of how the knowledge on Photosynthesis progressed during the twentieth century. The book will be of great value not only for the specialists of the subject but also for students and scholars interested in understanding the essence of the trial and error process governing modern science."
(Giovanni Giacometti, Professor Emeritus of Physical Chemistry, Dept. of Chemical Sciences, University of Padova, Italy)"The book 'Discoveries in Photosynthesis', edited by Govindjee, J. Thomas Beatty, Howard Gest and John F. Allen, is a remarkable Encyclopedia of Research in Photosynthesis, its discoveries, and its difficulties during the last century. Biologists, biochemists, physicists and molecular biologists were involved with their successes, as well as their failures, in putting together today's overall picture of this uniquely important physiological process, on which life on this planet depends. This book should not be missed by anyone interested in photosynthesis: It is a must for all libraries around the World."
(Giorgio Forti, Professor of Biology, University of Milano, Italy)"A wonderful collection of the most interesting articles on all aspects of photosynthesis. The personal perspectives are delightful, it is truly a "must own" book for its focus on the personal historical context surrounding most of the important breakthroughs in photosynthesis research."
(Douglas Bruce, Professor of Biological Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada)"Discoveries in Photosynthesis, edited by Govindjee, J.T. Beatty, H. Gest and J.F. Allen, is a splendid compendium of the great leaps forward in the research on photosynthesis, paralleling the advances in technology for the study of the life sciences in general. From the early use of isotopes to the electron microscope, the mechanisms of solar energy conversion are defined by over 100 authors--A must reading for scholars in the field of plant sciences & of microbiology, as well as those interested in the history of science."
(R. Clinton Fuller, Professor Emeritus, Department of Biochemistry, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA)"Congratulations on another volume in the Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration (AIPH) series. Govindjee's mentor Eugene Rabinowitch wrote the story of photosynthesis in the 1940s and 1950s. No one could ever hope to do that again; the amount of information is just too vast for any one person to ever hope to do a proper job of giving the real state of knowledge. However, Govindjee has really duplicated Rabinowitch's accomplishment in the only way it could be done nowadays, by enlisting editors who are expert in areas of the field and having them in turn enlist expert authors. When I look at the AIPH books on my shelf I am struck with how effectively they collectively summarize the field. I am continually impressed with how Govindjee has added new books to the series that make sense and really provide the level of detail that is needed."
(Robert Blankenship, Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, USA)
"Discoveries in Photosynthesis is easily among the most outstanding and valuable books published in the biological sciences in the last 100 years. ... The book is richly illustrated with nearly 800 photographs. In addition, there are many diagrams, tables and other supplementary material. I do not know of any comparable effort in the plant sciences or even the broader area of biology. ... Govindjee and his colleagues are to be congratulated for preparing this extraordinary book, indeed without a parallel." (S. C. Maheshwari, Current Science, Vol. 92 (2), January, 2007)
"... It is an outstanding assembly of more than 100 articles: of personal reflections, of methods and approaches, of dedications and obituaries of those involved in the unravelling of photosynthesis, .... The amount of information in these recollections is impressive in this book, and almost a complete source for references for a decisive time in a scientific field. ... It is with nostalgic pleasure that I read and recall those years. This book is a mine for everybody who wants to know more than just pure facts and what is condensed into a few pages in the textbooks." (Professor Emeritus Achim Trebst, Bochum University, Bochum, Germany, February 2007)
"Discoveries in Photosynthesis is a new edited volume out of the 'Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration' series ... . It is the first comprehensive scholarly attempt to gather original materials in order to understand the long and complex history of photosynthesis research. ... the volume is every inch as impressive as its important subject demands. ... Its coverage and perspectives are equally vast ... . It is, in short, a monumental effort." (Vassiliki Betty Smocovitis, Plant Science Bulletin, Vol. 53 (1), 2007)
"History of research is very important and much time of young researchers would be spared if they would know what had been done, in some cases many years ago. ... 112 review articles were published once more in one, very thick book. ... scientists interested in photosynthesis this volume is certainly an important material to have on the book shelf." (Z.
Synopsis
"Life Is Bottled Sunshine" [Wynwood Reade, Martyrdom of Man, 1924]. This inspired phrase is a four-word summary of the significance of photosynthesis for life on earth. The study of photosynthesis has attracted the attention of a legion of biologists, biochemists, chemists and physicists for over 200 years. Discoveries in Photosynthesis presents a sweeping overview of the history of photosynthesis investigations, and detailed accounts of research progress in all aspects of the most complex bioenergetic process in living organisms. Conceived of as a way of summarizing the history of research advances in photosynthesis as of millennium 2000, the book evolved into a majestic and encyclopedic saga involving all of the basic sciences. The book contains 111 papers, authored by 132 scientists from 19 countries. It includes overviews; timelines; tributes; minireviews on excitation energy transfer, reaction centers, oxygen evolution, light-harvesting and pigment-protein complexes, electron transport and ATP synthesis, techniques and applications, biogenesis and membrane architecture, reductive and assimilatory processes, transport, regulation and adaptation, Genetics, and Evolution; laboratories and national perspectives; and retrospectives that end in a list of photosynthesis symposia, books and conferences. Informal and formal photographs of scientists make it a wonderful book to have. This book is meant not only for the researchers and graduate students, but also for advanced undergraduates in Plant Biology, Microbiology, Cell Biology, Biochemistry, Biophysics and History of Science.
Table of Contents
Form the Series Editor,
Preface
A personal tribute to an eminent photosynthesis researcher, Martin D. Kamen (1913-2002)
Biographies of the Editors
Colour Plates
Part I Editorials: Celebrating the Millennium - Historical Highlights of Photosynthesis Research, Part 1.- Part 2.- Part 3 .- Part II Overviews and Timelines: History of the word photosynthesis and evolution of its definition.- In one era and out the other.- Timeline of discoveries: Anoxygenic photosynthesis.- Discoveries in oxygenic photosynthesis (1727-2002): a perspective.- Part III Tributes: 'And whose bright presence'-an appreciation of Robert Hill and his reaction.- The Contributions of James Franck to photosynthetic research: a tribute.- Hydrogen metabolism of green algae: discovery and early research-a tribute to Hans Gaffron and his coworkers.- Samuel Ruben's contributions to research on photosynthesis and bacterial metabolism with radioactive carbon. Contributions of Henrik Lundegårdh.-Part IV Excitation Energy Transfer: Photosynthetic exciton theory in the 1960s.- Excitation energy trapping in anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria.- Fluorescence lifetime, yield, energy transfer and spectrum in photosynthesis, 1950-1960.- Visualization of excitation energy transfer processes in plants and algae.-Plastoquinone redox control of chloroplast thylakoid protein phosphorylation and distribution of excitation energy between photosystems: discovery, background, implications.- Excitation transfer between photosynthetic units: the 1964 experiment.-Part V Reaction Centers: Research on photosynthetic reaction centers from 1932 to 1987.- Chlorophyll chemistry before and after crystals of photosynthetic reaction centers.- Electron donors and acceptors in the initial steps of photosynthesis in purple bacteria: a personal account.- My daily constitutional in Martinsried.- The two-electron gate in photosynthetic bacteria.- Steps on the way to building-blocks, 3-D crystals and X-ray structural analysis of photosystem I and II of water-oxidizing photosynthesis. a personal account.- The identification of the Photosystem II reaction center: a personal story.- The isolated Photosystem II reaction center: first attempts to directly measure the kinetics of primary charge separation.- Discovery of pheophytin function in the photosynthetic energy conversion as the primary electron acceptor of Photosystem II.- Engine of life and big bang of evolution.- Role of bicarbonate at the acceptor side of Photosystem II.- Unraveling the PS I reaction center: a long history or the sum of many efforts.- Photosystem I reaction center: past and future.- P 430: a retrospective, 1971-2001.- Part VI Oxygen Evolution: Apparatus and mechanism of photosynthetic oxygen evolution: a personal perspective.- Period-four oscillations of the flash-induced oxygen formation in photosynthesis.- Period four oscillations in chlorophyll a fluorescence- Chloride and calcium in Photosystem II: from effects to enigma.- The bicarbonate effect, oxygen evolution, and the shadow of Otto Warburg.- Early indications for manganese oxidation state changes during photosynthetic oxygen production.-Part VII Light-harvesting and Pigment-protein Complexes: Purple bacterial light-harvesting complexes: From dreams to structures.- The Fenna-Matthews-Olson protein.- Physical separation of chlorophyll-protein complexes.-How the chlorophyll-proteins got their names.- Phycobiliproteins and phycobilisomes: the early observations.- Part VIII Electron Transport and ATP Synthesis: Discovery and characterization of electron transfer proteins in the photosynthetic bacteria.- Membrane-anchored cytochrome c as an electron carrier in photosynthesis and respiration: past, present and future of an unexpected discovery.- The Q-cycle:a personal perspective.- The isolation of functional cytochrome b6-f complex: From lucky encounter to rewardingexperience.- Ironies in photosynthetic electron transport: A personal perspective.- The unfinished story of cytochrome f.-Early research on the role of plastocyanin in photosynthesis.- Irrungen, Wirrungen? The Mehler reaction in relation to cyclic electron transport in C3 plants.- Photophosphorylation and the chemiosmotic perspective.- Protons, proteins and ATP.- On why thylakoids energize ATP formation using either delocalized or localized proton gradients--A Ca2+ mediated role in thylakoid stress responses.- Part IX Techniques and Applications: The stopped-flow method and chemical intermediates in enzyme reactions - a personal essay.- The chequered history of the development and use of simultaneous equations for the accurate determination of chlorophylls a and b.- The contribution of photosynthetic pigments to the development of biochemical separation methods: 1900-1980.- On some aspects of photosynthesis revealed by photoacoustic studies: a critical evaluation.- The history of photosynthetic thermoluminescence.- Trails of green alga hydrogen research -from Hans Gaffron to new frontiers.- Engineering the chloroplast encoded proteins of Chlamydomonas.- Pictorial demonstrations of photosynthesis.- Part X Biogenesis and Membrane Architecture: Membrane biogenesis in anoxygenic photosynthetic prokaryotes.- Chloroplast structure: from chlorophyll granules to supra-molecular architecture of thylakoid membranes.- Changing concepts about the distribution of Photosystems I and II between grana-appressed and stroma-exposed thylakoid membranes.- Chloroplasts in living cells and the string of grana concept of chloroplast structure revisted.- From chloroplasts to chaperones: how one thing led to another.-Part XI Reductive and Assimilatory Processes: `Every dogma has its day': a personal look at carbon metabolism in photosynthetic bacteria.- Research on carbon dioxide fixation in photosynthetic microorganisms (1971-present).- Nitrogen fixation by photosynthetic bacteria.- Following the path of carbon in photosynthesis: a personal story.- Mapping the carbon reduction cycle: a personal retrospective.- Chloroplasts in envelopes: CO2 fixation by fully functional intact chloroplasts.- Along the trail from Fraction I protein to Rubisco (ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase).- The discovery of Rubisco activase - yet another story of serendipity.-The ferredoxin/thioredoxin system: from discovery to molecular structures and beyond.- How is ferredoxin-NADP reductase involved in the NADP photoreduction of chloroplasts?.- C4 photosynthesis: discovery and resolution.- Crassulacean acid metabolism photosynthesis: `working the night shift'.- Part XII Transport, Regulation and Adaptation: Three decades in transport business: studies of metabolite transport in chloroplasts - a personal perspective.- The present model for chlororespiration.- Affixing the O to Rubisco: discovering the source of photorespiratory glycolate and its regulation.- Linking the xanthophyll cycle with thermal energy dissipation.- Photoinhibition - a historical perspective.-A molecular understanding of complementary chromatic adaptation.-Anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria from extreme environments.-Light-induced behavioral responses (`phototaxis') in prokaryotes.- Part XIII Genetics: The early history of the genetics of photosynthetic bacteria: a personal account.- Photosynthesis genes and their expression in Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1: a tribute to my students and associates.-Regulation of photosystem synthesis in Rhodobacter capsulatus.- Photosynthesis research: advances through molecular biology - the beginnings, 1975-1980s and on.....- The three genomes of Chlamydomonas.- History of chloroplast genomics.-Gene-targeted and site-directed mutagenesis of photosynthesis genes in cyanobacteria.- Part XIV Evolution:Thinking about the evolution of photosynthesis.-Evolutionary relationships among photosynthetic bacteria.- On the natural selection and evolution of the aerobic phototrophic bacteria.- Prochlorophyta - a matter of class distinctions.- The Archea story.-Part XV Laboratories and National Perspectives: The Laboratory of Photosynthesis and its successors at Gif-sur-Yvette, France.- Photosynthesis and the Charles F. Kettering Research Laboratory.- Chlorophyll isolation, structure and function: major landmarks of the early history of research in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union.- Studies of chlorophyll biosynthesis in Russia.- The beginnings of research on biophysics of photosynthesis and initial contributions made by Russian scientists to its development.- Photosynthesis research in Greece: a historical snapshot (1960-2001).- Photosynthesis research in India: transition from yield physiology into molecular biology.- Photosynthesis research in the People's Republic of China.- Part XVI Retrospectives: A list of personal perspectives with selected quotations, along with lists of tributes, historical notes, Nobel and Kettering awards related to photosynthesis.- Nostalgia-passage of a physical chemist through the world of photosynthesis research (1963-1967).- The conference at the Airlie House in 1963.- Lists of symposia, books and conferences.- Indices.