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1.
A universal method allowing simultaneous extraction and analysis of diverse ultraviolet-B-absorbing compounds belonging to mycosporines and mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) is presented. Mycosporines and MAAs are found both in prokaryotes and eukaryotes and possess photoprotective properties. Our method was successfully tested by screening 31 cyanobacterial, 11 actinomycete and 45 fungal strains for their mycosporine and MAA content. The majority of the isolates tested originated from subaerial rock surfaces and were inherently protected from excessive sun irradiation. The new method includes a solid-liquid extraction procedure, followed by a reversed phase liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. Eight different mycosporines and five MAAs were efficiently separated and identified by their retention times, absorption maxima and fragmentation patterns. Mycosporines were found both in rock-inhabiting fungi and cyanobacteria and consequently may render an ecological marker of these peculiar terrestrial environments.  相似文献   

2.
Rhodophyta produce a variety of chemically different mycosporine‐like amino acids (MAAs), compounds that are known as some of the strongest ultraviolet (UV) absorbing molecules in nature. Accordingly, they primarily act as photoprotectants against harmful levels of solar ultraviolet radiation in the UV‐A and UV‐B range. In order to get a deeper understanding of the chemical diversity of MAAs in red algae, pure standards of eleven mycosporine‐like amino acids were isolated from three different species (Agarophyton chilense, Pyropia plicata and Champia novae‐zelandiae) using various chromatographic methods. Their structures were confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry. Four out of the eleven MAAs are reported for the first time in algae. In addition, a new high‐performance liquid chromatography method was developed for the separation of all isolated MAAs and successfully applied for the analysis of twenty‐three red algal species of marine origin. All of them contained MAAs, the most abundant compounds were shinorine, palythine, asterina‐330 and porphyra‐334. For some samples, the direct assignment of MAAs based on their UV spectra was not possible; therefore, the target analytes were enriched by a simple concentration step, followed by liquid chromatography‐mass spectrometry analysis of the extracts. This approach enabled a deeper insight into the MAA pattern of red algae, indicating that not only the four dominant ones are synthesized but also many others, which were often described as unknown compounds in previous studies.  相似文献   

3.
Mycosporine-like amino-acids (MAAs) are found in aquatic bacteria, algae, and animals. A related compound, the mycosporine-glutaminol-glucoside (myc-glu-glu), has recently been reported in freshwater yeasts. Although animals depend on other organisms as their source of MAAs, they can efficiently accumulate them in their tissues. In this work we assessed the potential transfer of the yeast mycosporine myc-glu-glu from the diet into the copepod Boeckella antiqua and the ciliate Paramecium bursaria. For this purpose, we performed experiments to study the feeding of B. antiqua and P. bursaria on the yeast Rhodotorula minuta and their ability to bioaccumulate myc-glu-glu. Bioaccumulation of myc-glu-glu in B. antiqua was assessed through long-term factorial experiments manipulating the diet (Chlamydomonas reinhardii and C. reinhardii + yeasts) and radiation exposure (PAR and PAR + UVR). Shorter term experiments were designed in the case of P. bursaria. The composition and concentration of MAAs in the diet and in the consumers were determined by HPLC analyses. Our results showed that even though both consumers ingested yeast cells, they were unable to accumulate myc-glu-glu. Moreover, when exposed to conditions that stimulated the accumulation of photoprotective compounds (i.e. UVR exposure), an increase in MAAs concentration occurred in copepods fed C. reinhardii plus yeasts as well as in those fed only C. reinhardii. This suggests that the copepods were able to modify their tissue concentrations of MAAs in response to environmental clues but also that the contribution of yeast mycosporines to total MAAs concentration was negligible.  相似文献   

4.
 A survey of 23 species of scleractinians, belonging to seven families and 8 genera, collected from two different areas in French Polynesia, showed that all specimens possessed between four and seven UV-absorbing compounds, identified as mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs). In all, 11 different MAAs molecules were found, of which two were previously unknown. Palythine and mycosporine-glycine were the most abundant MAAs in the corals. With few exceptions, most specimens of each species possessed the same pattern of MAAs. Similarly, species from the same genus also had very similar qualitative composition of MAAs, although quantities of individuals MAAs varied from specimen to specimen. This suggests that MAAs are ancient and evolutionarily well conserved. Accepted: 22 October 1996  相似文献   

5.
1. Mycosporine‐like amino acids (MAAs) are a family of secondary metabolites known to protect organisms exposed to solar UV radiation. We tested their distribution among several planktonic ciliates bearing Chlorella isolated from an oligo‐mesotrophic lake in Tyrol, Austria. In order to test the origin of these compounds, the MAAs were assessed by high performance liquid chromatography in both the ciliates and their symbiotic algae. 2. Considering all Chlorella‐bearing ciliates, we found: (i) seven different MAAs (mycosporine‐glycine, palythine, asterina‐330, shinorine, porphyra‐334, usujirene, palythene); (ii) one to several MAAs per species and (iii) qualitative and quantitative seasonal changes in the MAAs (e.g. in Pelagodileptus trachelioides). In all species tested, concentrations of MAAs were always <1% of ciliate dry weight. 3. Several MAAs were also identified in the Chlorella isolated from the ciliates, thus providing initial evidence for their symbiotic origin. In Uroleptus sp., however, we found evidence for a dietary source of MAAs. 4. Our results suggest that accumulation of MAAs in Chlorella‐bearing ciliates represents an additional benefit of this symbiosis and an adaptation for survival in sunlit, UV‐exposed waters.  相似文献   

6.
The isolation and structure of a biologically important mycosporine are described. The use of Sephadex ion-exchange chromatography and HPLC provides a convenient method for the isolation of mycosporines.  相似文献   

7.
The cyanobacterium Chlorogloeopsis PCC 6912 was found to synthesize and accumulate two putative UV sunscreen compounds of the mycosporine (mycosporine-like amino acid; MAA) type: mycosporine-glycine and shinorine. These MAAs were not constitutively present in the cells; their synthesis could be induced specifically either by exposure to UVB radiation (280–320 nm) or by osmotic stress, but not by other stress factors such as heat or cold shock, nutrient limitation, or photooxidative stress. A significant synergistic enhancement of MAA synthesis was observed when both stress factors were applied in combination. Although osmotic stress could induce MAA synthesis, comparison of the intracellular contents of MAAs with those of sugar osmolytes (glucose and trehalose) indicated that MAAs play no significant role in attaining osmotic homeostasis. UVB strongly enhanced the accumulation of shinorine, whereas osmotic stress had a more pronounced effect on mycosporine-glycine. This differential effect on the steady-state contents of each MAA could be explained either by differential regulation of biosynthesis or by differential loss rates of MAAs (leakage) under each condition. A preferential leakage of mycosporine-glycine from the cells after a hypoosmotic shock was detected. The results are interpreted in terms of an adaptive necessity for a combined regulatory control responding to both UV and external osmotic conditions in organisms that accumulate water-soluble sunscreens intracellularly. Received: 26 March 1999 / Accepted: 13 July 1999  相似文献   

8.
Several unknown mycosporine‐like amino acids (MAAs) have been previously isolated from some cultured species of toxic dinoflagellates of the Alexandrium genus (Dinophyceae). One of them, originally called M‐333, was tentatively identified as a shinorine methyl ester, but the precise nature of this compound is still unknown. Using a high‐resolution reversed‐phase liquid chromatography mass spectrometry analyses (HPLC/MS), we found that natural populations of the red tide dinoflagellate Prorocentrum micans Ehrenberg showed a net dominance of M‐333 together with lesser amounts of other MAAs. We also documented the isolation and characterization of this MAA from natural dinoflagellate populations and from Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech cultures. Using a comparative fragmentation study in electrospray mass spectrometry between deuterated and non‐deuterated M‐333 compounds and synthesized mono and dimethyl esters of shinorine, this novel compound was characterized as mycosporine‐serine‐glycine methyl ester, a structure confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance. These isobaric compounds can be differentiated by their fragmentation patterns in MS3 experiments because the extension and the specific site of the methylation changed the fragmentation pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Bloom‐forming dinoflagellates often synthesize high concentrations of mycosporine‐like amino acids (MAAs) as a protection from high PAR and UV radiation, which may afford them a competitive advantage over other species. Photoprotection and long‐term acclimation to natural and enhanced UVB radiation were examined during 4 weeks in three dinoflagellates and one diatom. Semi‐continuous, nutrient‐replete cultures were maintained outdoors under natural light, with or without additional UVB (from lamps). The photosynthetic performance (XE‐PAM fluorometry) and the concentration and composition of MAAs and photoprotective carotenoids (PPCs; comprising xanthophylls) were followed weekly. A great variety of MAAs was found in the dinoflagellates (up to 10, identified by cochromatography and LC–MS). Large differences between sp. (and between two strains of the same sp.) were observed. In most cases, the composition and concentration of MAAs and PPCs increased under enhanced UVB. Growth rate and photosynthetic performance were sometime lower under enhanced UVB, while in other cases photoacclimation seemed to occur. The least affected sp. was Alexandrium tamarense who responded most rapidly to enhanced UVB. The algae also responded to changes in natural incident radiation. Some methodological aspects of MAA quantification were also investigated (with four species of dinoflagellates). Our results indicate how freezing (liquid‐N) likely breaks the cells, mobilizing the water‐soluble MAAs in the filter moist (otherwise highly packaged in fresh cells), while the organelles containing the pigments remain relatively intact. The implications of standard sample handling on the evaluation of MAA concentration in algae and on the estimation of the absorption of suspended material in water from in vivo spectroscopy (filter pad technique) will also be discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Zooplankton species have evolved several adaptive strategies to minimize damage caused by exposure to solar ultraviolet radiation, but the environmental conditions favoring one strategy or another are not yet fully understood. Here, I quantified the concentration of photoprotective compounds (carotenoids and mycosporine-like amino acids or MAAs) and assessed the photorepair activity (photolyase assay) in populations of the calanoid copepod, Arctodiaptomus jurisowitchi and the cladocerans, Daphnia himalaya and D. longispina, from five high altitude lakes located in the Himalayan Region (Khumbu Valley, Nepal) between 4890 and 5440 m above sea level. The concentration and diversity of MAAs were low in copepods, as well as in seston samples. Significant differences in the concentration of MAAs among the five copepod populations were largely explained (96%) by the lake depth refuge (i.e., the fraction of the water column to which 1% of the surface UVR at 320 nm penetrates). Concentrations of carotenoids (mostly free astaxanthin) in copepods were among the highest reported in the literature. Similar to MAAs, the carotenoid concentration was inversely related to the lake depth refuge. The lowest concentration of photoprotective compounds in copepods was observed in a turbid glacier lake, whereas the highest was found in a shallow water body dominated by a benthic mat of filamentous green algae. Except for the presence of melanin in D. himalaya, no other photoprotective compounds were found in cladocerans. The assay of photolyase activity in A. jurisowitchi and D. himalaya suggested the absence of a photorepair mechanism. The results of this study indicate that the copepod populations from this relatively pristine alpine region rely mainly on the accumulation of carotenoids to minimize damage by UV radiation, a pattern that strongly contrasts with what is known for copepods from other alpine lakes, for instance, in the Alps. I hypothesize that this difference is attributed to nitrogen limitation of the MAA synthesis in phytoplankton from remote Himalayan lakes.  相似文献   

11.
Karsten U  Lembcke S  Schumann R 《Planta》2007,225(4):991-1000
The effects of artificial ultraviolet radiation [UVR; 8 W m−2 ultraviolet-A (UVA), 0.4 W m−2 ultraviolet-B (UVB)] on photosynthetic performance, growth and the capability to synthesise mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) was investigated in the aeroterrestrial green algae Stichococcus sp. and Chlorella luteoviridis forming biofilms on building facades, and compared with the responses of two green algae, from soil (Myrmecia incisa) and brackish water (Desmodesmus subspicatus). All species exhibited decreasing quantum efficiency (F v/F m) after 1–3 days exposure to UVR. After 8–12 days treatment, however, all aeroterrestrial isolates exhibited full recovery under UVA and UVA/B. In contrast, D. subspicatus showed only 80% recovery after treatment with UVB. While Stichococcus sp. and C. luteoviridis exhibited a broad tolerance in growth under all radiation conditions tested, M. incisa showed a significant decrease in growth rate after exposure to UVA and UVA/B. Similarly D. subspicatus grew with a reduced rate under UVA, but UVA/B led to full inhibition. Using HPLC, an UV-absorbing MAA (324 nm-MAA) was identified in Stichococcus sp. and C. luteoviridis. While M. incisa contained a specific 322 nm-MAA, D. subspicatus lacked any trace of such compounds. UV-exposure experiments indicated that all MAA-containing species are capable of synthesizing and accumulating these compounds, thus supporting their function as an UV-sunscreen. All data well explain the conspicuous ecological success of aeroterrestrial green algae in biofilms on facades. Biosynthesis and accumulation of MAAs under UVR seem to result in a reduced UV-sensitivity of growth and photosynthesis, which consequently may enhance survival in the environmentally harsh habitat.  相似文献   

12.
Effects of two intensities (1 and 5 W?m?2) of UV-B radiation on the synthesis of UV-absorbing compounds in a terrestrial cyanobacterium Nostoc flagelliforme were investigated. UV-B radiation resulted in lower biomass. Short period (less than 12 h) of UV-B radiation caused an increase of chlorophyll a content, but subsequent duration of treatment (more than 24 h) resulted in a rapid decrease. N. flagelliforme synthesized UV-absorbing compounds such as scytonemin and mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) in response to UV-B radiation. Upon 48 h of exposure to UV-B radiation, scytonemin content in cells increased by 103.8 and 164.0 % at 1 and 5 W?m?2, respectively. Oligosaccharide-linked mycosporine-like amino acids increased by 145.5 % after 12 h at 5 W?m?2 and 114.5 % after 48 h at 1 W?m?2 UV-B radiation. HPLC analysis showed that nine MAAs existed in N. flagelliforme cells both from liquid suspension culture and field colony. But the concentration and kinds of them were different. At the two distinct levels of UV-B radiation, the content of particular MAAs increased, declined, or remained unchanged. Moreover, the appearance of two new MAAs was observed.  相似文献   

13.
Mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) have been implicated in many biochemical processes in marine organisms, but the major emphasis has been directed to their role as UV protectant compounds. The quantitation of MAAs, mycosporine-glu-gly, mycosporine-gly, usujirene and palythene in the sponge Dysidea herbacea [34] suggests that whereas some mycosporine amino acids may serve in this capacity, others are intrinsically involved in the reproductive process. The role of other compounds, such as homarine, gadusol and arachidonic acid, in reproduction of this sponge is also discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The links among mycosporine‐like amino acids (MAAs), algal physiological ecology, and the environment may be viewed from two sides. The UV‐absorption spectra of MAAs make them prime candidates for UV‐screening compounds, and indeed, numerous studies have shown that a high concentration of MAAs is correlated with various degrees of protection of cellular processes from UV damage. Thus, it might be said that the structure of terrestrial, eulittoral and sublittoral algal communities depends in part on their ability to synthesize effective quantities of MAAs. Corollaries to this hypothesis might include the proposition that those species incapable of synthesizing MAAs will be excluded from UV‐containing environments, and that UV is necessary to trigger MAA synthesis. However, a number of studies have demonstrated that triggers of MAA synthesis need not include exposure to UV, but may include the relative availability of nitrogen, osmotic stress, or high levels of photosynthetically active radiation. Furthermore, the response to these factors may vary as a function of other environmental conditions. These issues will be discussed with respect to elucidating the master switch for MAA synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
We hypothesised that Antarctic krill acquire UV-absorbing mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) from dietary algae, which produce MAAs in response to ultraviolet (UV) irradiation. To test this hypothesis, we grew cultures of Phaeocystis antarctica that had been grown under either photosynthetically active radiation (PAR, 400-750 nm) plus UV irradiation (UVR, 280-400 nm), or else PAR-only. Algae grown under PAR-only produced high concentrations of porphyra-334, whereas additional UVR caused formation of high concentrations of mycosporine-glycine:valine and lower concentrations of porphyra-334. Krill were fed with either of these two cultures on eight occasions over 63 days. A third group was starved for the duration of the experiment. Animals were analysed after 36 and 63 days for MAA content. Remaining animals from all treatments were starved for a further 35 days and analysed to examine MAA retention characteristics. Our findings are that krill acquired different MAAs from dietary algae depending on the light conditions under which the algae were grown. Specifically, krill fed algae grown under PAR-only had higher concentrations of porphyra-334 than starved krill. Conversely, krill fed algae grown under PAR with additional UVR had high body concentrations of mycosporine-glycine:valine. MAA concentrations in starved krill remained static throughout the experiment. However, long term starvation (35 days) caused levels of certain acquired MAAs to decline. From this we can infer that MAA concentrations in krill are dependent on the MAA content of phytoplankton, and therefore the algae's response to UV exposure. This has implications for transfer of MAAs through marine trophic webs.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated the interaction of diet and accumulation of UV-absorbing mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) in body tissues and spawn of the sea hare Aplysia dactylomela to determine if MAA accumulation reflects type and level of dietary intake. Food sources were the red algae Acanthophora spicifera, Centroceras clavulatum, and Laurencia sp., and the green alga, Ulva lactuca. Adults were maintained on these foods for 40 days, after which feces were collected and tissues separated by dissection. Field animals were similarly sampled at this time. All spawn from experimental and field animals was collected over the study period. Samples, including seaweed foods, were analysed for six MAAs. Overnight consumption experiments using a variety of common seaweeds and one seagrass from A. dactylomela's habitat showed that the four seaweeds selected as foods were among those best-eaten by Aplysia. After 40 days levels of specific MAAs in the tissues of experimental animals showed excellent correlation with those in their diets, suggesting that the MAAs were dietarily-derived. Relative MAA contents in spawn from all diet groups correlated well with those in spawn from field animals. Commonest MAAs in spawn were porphyra-334, shinorine, and palythine, in this order. Concentrations of these MAAs were maintained at constant levels over time in spawn from all diet groups eating red algae and from field animals. Spawn from the Ulva dietary group showed an initial significant decline in MAA concentrations, but levels stabilized after the first 2 weeks. Skin was rich in porphyra-334 and shinorine, and levels of these in experimental animals correlated well with comparable levels in the skin of field animals. Digestive glands contained high levels of asterina-330, particularly those of the Centroceras dietary group, where concentrations reached a maximum of 21 mg dry g(-1).  相似文献   

17.
In field studies conducted at the Kongsfjord (Spitsbergen), the effect of filtered natural radiation conditions (solar without ulraviolet [UV]-A+UV-B, solar without UV-B, solar) on photosynthesis and the metabolism of UV-absorbing mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) in the marine red alga Devaleraea ramentacea have been studied. While solar treatment without UV-A+UV-B did not affect photosynthesis during the course of a day, solar without UV-B and the full solar spectrum led to a strong inhibition. However, after offset of the various radiation conditions, all algae fully recovered. Isolates collected from different depths were exposed in the laboratory to artificial fluence rates of photosynthetic active radiation (PAR), PAR+UV-A, and PAR+UV-A+UV-B. The photosynthetic capacity was affected in accordance with the original sampling depth, i.e. shallow-water isolates were more resistant than algae from deeper waters, indicating that D. ramentacea is able to acclimate to changes in irradiance. Seven different UV-absorbing MAAs were detected in this alga, namely mycosporine-glycine, shinorine, porphyra-334, palythine, asterina-330, palythinol, and palythene. The total amount of MAAs continuously decreased with increasing collecting depth when sampled in mid June, and algae taken in late August from the same depths contained on average 30–45% higher MAA concentrations, indicating a seasonal effect as well. The presence of increasing MAA contents with decreasing depth correlated with a more insensitive photosynthetic capacity under both UV-A and UV-B treatments. Populations of D. ramentacea collected from 1 m depth, with one fully exposed to solar radiation and the other growing protected as understorey vegetation underneath the kelp Laminaria saccharina, exhibited quantitatively different MAA compositions in the apices. The exposed seaweeds contained 2.5-fold higher MAA values compared with the more shaded algae. Moreover, the exposed isolates showed a strong tissue gradient in MAAs, pigments, and proteins. The green apices contained 5-fold higher MAA contents than the red bases. Transplantation of D. ramentacea from 2 m depth to the surface induced the formation and accumulation of MAAs after 1 week exposure to the full solar spectrum. Control samples which were treated with the solar spectrum without UV-A+B or with solar without UV-B showed unchanged MAA contents, indicating a strong UV-B effect on MAA metabolism. All data well supported the suggested physiological function of MAAs as natural UV sunscreens in macroalgae.  相似文献   

18.
We tested the hypothesis that there is a relation between phylotypes (phylogenetic types, as determined by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and partial sequence analysis of the small subunit ribosomal RNA gene (SSUrDNA)) and the synthesis of mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) by symbiotic dinoflagellates under the influence of ultraviolet radiation (UV-B/A) and photosynthetically active radiation (PAR). We exposed 27 isolates of symbiotic dinoflagellates simultaneously to UV-B/A and PAR, and subsequently determined the MAAs present in cell extracts and in the media. The algae used included 24 isolates of Symbiodinium spp. originating from jellyfishes, sea anemones, zoanthids, scleractinians, octocorals, and bivalves, and three others in the genera Gymnodinium, Gloeodinium and Amphidinium from a jellyfish, an hydrocoral and a flatworm, respectively. In this study, all of the phylotype A Symbiodinium spp. synthesized up to three identified MAAs. None of the 11 cultured phylotypes B and C Symbiodinium spp. synthesized MAAs. The three non-Symbiodinium symbionts also synthesized up to three MAAs. The results support a conclusion that phylotype A Symbiodinium spp. have a high predilection for the synthesis of MAAs, while phylotypes B and C do not. Synthesis of MAAs by symbiotic dinoflagellates in culture does not appear to relate directly to depths or to the UV exposure regimes from which the consortia were collected.  相似文献   

19.
Observed levels of population genetic diversity are often associated with differences in species dispersal and reproductive strategies. In symbiotic organisms, the genetic diversity level of each biont should also be highly influenced by biont transmission. In this study, we evaluated the influence of the reproductive strategies of cyanolichen species on the current levels of population genetic diversity of bionts. To eliminate any phylogenetic noise, we selected two closely related species within the genus Degelia, which only differ in their reproductive systems. We sampled all known populations of both species in central Spain and genotyped the fungal and cyanobacterial components of lichen samples using DNA sequences as molecular markers. We applied population genetics approaches to evaluate the genetic diversity and population genetic structure of the symbiotic components of both lichen species. Our results indicate that fungal and cyanobiont genetic diversity is highly influenced by the reproductive systems of lichen fungus. We detected higher bionts genetic diversity values in the sexual species Degelia plumbea. By contrast, the levels of fungal and cyanobiont genetic diversity in the asexual species Degelia atlantica were extremely low (almost clonal), and the species shows a high specificity towards its cyanobiont. Our results indicate that reproduction by vegetative propagules, in species of the genus Degelia, favors vertical transmission and clonality, which affects the species’ capacity for resources and competition, thereby limiting the species to restricted niches.  相似文献   

20.
Mycosporine- like amino acids (MAAs) are small (<400Da), colourless, water soluble compounds composed of cyclohexenone or cyclohexinimine chromophere conjugated with the nitrogen substituent of amino acid or its amino alcohol. These compounds are known for their UV- absorbing role in various organisms and seem to have evolutionary significance. The biosynthesis of MAAs is presumed to occur via the first part of shikimate pathway. In the present work two cyanobacteria Synechocystis PCC 6803 and Anabaena cylindrica were tested for their ability to synthesize MAAs and protein involved in the production of MAAs. It was found that protein sequence 3-phosphoshikimate 1-carboxyvinyltransferase is involved in producing mycosporine glycine in Synechocystis PCC 6803 and 3-dehydroquinate synthase is involved for producing shinorine in Anabaena cylindrica. Phylogenetic and bioinformatic analysis of Mycosporine like amino acid producing protein sequence of both cyanobacterial species Synechocystis PCC 6803 and Anabaena cylindrica provide a useful framework to understand the relationship of the different forms and how they have evolved from a common ancestor. These products seem to be conserved but the residues are prone to variation which might be due the fact that different cyanobacteria show different physiological process in response of Ultraviolet stress.  相似文献   

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