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Chlororespiration in Green Algae Isolated From Desert Crusts
Authors:L A Lewis  Z G Cardon  D Tyser
Abstract:Photosynthetic organisms enduring extreme temperatures, low water availability, or high light require photoprotective mechanisms to prevent sustained damage to photosynthetic machinery. Green microalgae living in desert crust communities of the south‐western US experience all these environmental stresses, yet photophysiological studies of green algae in the literature have focused on only a handful of common aquatic and marine species. We are examining the variation in green algal photoprotective mechanisms that is the result of natural selection acting independently in multiple lineages of highly diverse desert green algae (Chlorophyta) within the classes Chlorophyceae and Trebouxiophyceae. We have found that unusually extensive dark reduction of the plastoquinone pool is a prominent photophysiological feature among these desert algae; this reduction may be linked with enhanced chlororespiration. Recently, chlororespiration in higher plants has been linked through mutant analysis to control of the carotenoid synthetic pathway, heat stress, and starch metabolism among other pathways, though the function of chlororespiration remains controversial. Given that green algae and higher plants are monophyletic, analysis of potential chlororespiration in desert green algae may help decipher the evolution of the chlororespiratory process as well as its potential role in photoprotection in desert habitats.
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