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1.
The sensitivity to UV-B radiation (UVBR: 280–315 nm) was tested for littoral (Palmaria palmata[L.] O. Kuntze, Chondrus crispus Stackhouse) and sublittoral (Phyllophora pseudoceranoides S. G. Gmelin, Rhodymenia pseudopalmata[Lamouroux] Silva, Phycodrys rubens[L.] Batt, Polyneura hilliae[Greville] Kylin) red macrophytes from Brittany, France. Algal fragments were subjected to daily repeated exposures of artificial UVBR that were realistic for springtime solar UVBR at the water surface in Brittany. Growth, DNA damage, photoinhibition, and UV-absorbing compounds were monitored during 2 weeks of PAR + UV-A radiation (UVAR) + UVBR, whereas PAR + UVAR and PAR treatments were used as controls. The littoral species showed a higher UV tolerance than the sublittoral species. After 2 weeks, growth of P. palmata and C. crispus was not significantly affected by UVBR, and DNA damage, measured as the number of cyclobutane-pyrimidine dimers per 106 nucleotides, was negligible. Photoinhibition, determined as the decline in optimal quantum yield, was low and decreased during the course of the experiment, coinciding with the production of UV-absorbing compounds in these species. In contrast, no UV-absorbing compounds were induced in the sublittoral species. Growth rates of P. pseudoceranoides and R. pseudopalmata were reduced by 40% compared with the PAR treatment. Additionally, constant levels of DNA damage and pronounced photoinhibition were observed after the UVBR treatments. Growth was completely halted for Phycodrys rubens and Polyneura hilliae, whereas DNA damage accumulated in the course of the experiment. Because Phycodrys rubens and Polyneura hilliae showed the same degree of photoinhibition as the other sublittoral species, it appears that the accumulation of DNA damage may have been responsible for the complete inhibition of growth. The results suggest an important role of DNA repair pathways in determining the UV sensitivity in red macrophytes.  相似文献   

2.
The temperature dependence of UV effects was studied for Arctic and temperate isolates of the red macrophytes Palmaria palmata, Coccotylus truncatus and Phycodrys rubens. The effects of daily repeated artificial ultraviolet B and A radiation (UVBR: 280–320?nm, UVAR: 320–400?nm) treatments were examined for all isolates at 6, 12 and 18?°C by measuring growth, optimal quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm) and cyclobutane-pyrimidine dimer (CPD) accumulation. Furthermore, possible ecotypic differences in UV sensitivity between Arctic and temperate isolates were evaluated. Large species-specific differences in UV sensitivity were observed for all parameters: the lower subtidal species C. truncatus and P. rubens were highly sensitive to the UV treatments, whereas P. palmata, which predominantly occurs in the upper subtidal zone, was not affected by these treatments. Only minor differences were found between Arctic and temperate isolates, suggesting that no differences in UV sensitivity have evolved in these species. Relative growth rates were temperature-dependent, whereas species-specific UV effects on growth rates were relatively independent of temperature. In contrast, the species-specific decrease in Fv/Fm and its subsequent recovery were temperature-dependent in all species. UV effects on Fv/Fm were lower at 12 and 18?°C compared with 6?°C. In addition, UV effects on Fv/Fm decreased in the course of the experiment at all temperatures, indicating acclimation to the UV treatments. CPDs accumulated during the experiment in both isolates of P. rubens, whereas CPD concentrations remained low for the other two species. CPD accumulation appeared to be independent of temperature. The results suggest that summer temperatures occurring in temperate regions facilitate repair of UV-induced damage and acclimation to UV radiation in these algae compared with Arctic temperatures. Because the differences in UV effects on Fv/Fm, growth and CPD accumulation were relatively small over a broad range of temperatures, it was concluded that the influence of temperature on UV effects is small in these species.  相似文献   

3.
We examined how UV radiation and phosphorus (P) affect the taxonomic composition, abundance, and biomass of phytoplankton in an oligotrophic boreal lake. We exposed phytoplankton to three different solar radiation regimes (PAR + UV‐A radiation [UVAR]+ UV‐B radiation [UVBR], PAR + UVAR, and PAR only) and to five levels of P. The biomass of small chrysophytes was reduced by 350% after exposure to PAR + UVAR + UVBR compared with PAR only. No other taxa were found to be negatively affected by exposure to UVBR. Several taxa (e.g. Chry‐ sochromulina laurentiana Kling) were sensitive to UVAR, whereas others (e.g. Tabellaria flocculosa (Roth) Kutzing) were not affected by UV radiation exposure. Principal components analysis ordination separated phytoplankton that were negatively affected by UV radiation and/or positively affected by P treatments (e.g. small chrysophytes, Cryptomonas rostratiformis, T. flocculosa) from those that generally were unaffected by either treatment (e.g. desmids, some Cyanobacteria). Richness, Shannon‐Weaver diversity, and evenness were significantly higher in phytoplankton communities shielded from UVAR and UVBR. The relationship between diversity and richness was positive in all phytoplankton samples except in those exposed to UVBR. Thus, UVBR‐exposed phytoplankton communities were dominated by a few species even though the number of taxa remained relatively unchanged. Consequently, alterations in the UV environments of lakes resulting from climate warming (e.g. drought) and land‐use change (e.g. increased P export) will likely promote shifts in the community composition of lake phytoplankton.  相似文献   

4.
Depth distribution of kelp species in Helgoland (North Sea) is characterized by occurrence of Laminaria digitata in the upper sublittoral, whereas L. saccharina and L. hyperborea dominate the mid and lower sublittoral region. Laminaria digitata is fertile in summer whereas both other species are fertile in autumn/winter. To determine the light sensitivity of the propagules, zoospores of L. digitata, L. saccharina and L. hyperborea were exposed in the laboratory to different exposure times of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR; 400–700 nm), PAR + UVA radiation (UVAR; 320–400 nm) and PAR + UVAR + UVB radiation (UVBR; 280–320 nm). Optimum quantum yield of PSII and DNA damage were measured after exposure. Subsequently, recovery of photosynthetic efficiency and DNA damage repair, as well as germination rate were measured after 2 and 3 d cultivation in dim white light. Photosynthetic efficiency of all species was photoinhibited already at 20 µmol photons m−2 s−1 PAR, whereas UV radiation (UVR) had a significant additional effect on photoinhibition. Recovery of the PSII function was observed in all species but not in spores exposed to irradiation longer than 4 h of PAR + UVA + UVB and 8 h of PAR + UVA. The amount of UVB-induced DNA damage measured as cyclobutane–pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) increased with exposure time and highest damage was detected in the spores of lower subtidal L. hyperborea relative to the other two species. Significant removal of CPDs indicating repair of DNA damage was observed in all species after 2 d in low white light especially in the spores of upper subtidal L. digitata. Therefore, efficient DNA damage repair and recovery of PSII damage contributed to the germination success but not in spores exposed to 16 h of UVBR. UV absorption of zoospore suspension in L. digitata is based both on the absorption by the zoospores itself as well as by exudates in the medium. In contrast, the absorption of the zoospore suspension in L. saccharina and L. hyperborea is based predominantly on the absorption by the exudates in the medium. This study indicates that UVR sensitivity of zoospores is related to the seasonal zoospore production as well as the vertical distribution pattern of the large sporophytes.  相似文献   

5.
Photosynthetic performance of the terrestrial cyanobacterium Nostoc flagelliforme (M. J. Berkeley et M. A. Curtis) Bornet et Flahault during rehydration and desiccation has been previously characterized, but little is known about the effects of solar UV radiation (280–400 nm) on this species. We investigated the photochemical activity during rehydration and subsequent desiccation while exposing the filamentous colonies to different solar radiation treatments. Photochemical activity could be reactivated by rehydration under full‐spectrum solar radiation, the species being insensitive to both ultraviolet‐A radiation (UVAR; 315–400 nm) and ultraviolet‐B radiation (UVBR). When the rehydrated colonies were exposed for desiccation, the effective PSII photochemical yield was inhibited by visible radiation (PAR) at the initial stage of water loss, then increased with further decrease in water content, and reached its highest value at the water content of 10%–30%. However, no significant difference was observed among the radiation treatments except for the moment when they were desiccated to critical water content of about 2%–3%. At such a critical water content, significant reduction by UVBR of the effective quantum yield was observed in the colonies that were previously rehydrated under indoor light [without ultraviolet radiation (UVR)], but not in those reactivated under scattered or direct solar radiation (with UVR), indicating that preexposure to UVR during rehydration led to higher resistance to UVR during desiccation. The photosynthetic CO2 uptake by the desiccated colonies was enhanced by elevation of CO2 but was not affected by both UVAR and UVBR. It increased with enhanced desiccation to reach the maximal values at water content of 40%–50%. The UV‐absorbing compounds and the colony sheath were suggested to play an important role in screening harmful UVR.  相似文献   

6.
Rosa Martínez 《Polar Biology》2007,30(9):1159-1172
Depletion of stratospheric ozone causes a significant increase in UV radiation in the Antarctic regions. Its effects include DNA damage, as well as impairment of photosynthesis, respiration, protein synthesis and other metabolic functions. Defence systems of cells are directed against free oxygen radicals liberated through UV radiation. One of their main components of defence systems are superoxide dismutases (SODs). The effects of ultraviolet radiation A and B (UVAR and UVBR) on protein synthesis, respiratory electron transfer (ETS) activity and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity in Antarctic plankton were examined. Samples were taken in the Gerlache Strait (Antarctica). Three stations were situated in an area, which showed a Cryptomonas bloom. Two stations were located in areas having a bloom of green nanoflagellates. Samples were exposed for 3 h to photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), or to PAR + UVAR or to PAR + UVAR + UVBR, under fixed experimental irradiances. UVBR inhibited protein synthesis and ETS activity, and enhanced SOD activity. UVAR enhanced protein synthesis and ETS activity, and inhibited SOD activity. Samples, which had received more solar radiation prior to experiments showed less inhibition of protein synthesis by experimental UVBR, which suggests acclimation to ambient radiation. Cryptomonas-dominated stations showed less SOD activity than the green flagellate-dominated stations, which might be related to the protection conferred by their phycoerythrin.  相似文献   

7.
Cultures of the temperate estuarine diatom, Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin (NEPCC Clone 31), were grown under ambient intensities of ultraviolet-A radiation (UVAR), photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), and various intensities of ultraviolet-B radiation (UVBR; 290–320 nm). Growth rates and cell volumes were monitored for 36 d. UVBR decreased growth rates and increased cell volumes. Sensitivity of growth to UVBR increased with time. Growth rates of P. tricornutum decreased with increasing ratios of UVBR:UVAR + PAR.  相似文献   

8.
Chl fluorescence was used to measure the photosynthetic capacity of the green alga Dunaliella tertiolecta in order to investigate interactions between susceptibility to acute UV‐B radiation (UVBR, 280–320 nm) exposure and decreased nitrogen availability. Under UVBR exposure the decline in the fluorescence parameters Fv/Fm (the maximum effective quantum yield ΦPSIIe‐max) and Fv′/Fm′ (the operational quantum yield of PSII, ΦPSIIe) were enhanced with higher UVBR fluxes, with the data well described by the Kok model, inferring that a dynamic balance existed between damage and repair with the repair proportional to the pool size of inactivated targets. When UVBR exposure was coupled with nitrogen limitation, the inhibition of photosynthesis was intensified. Under the more severely N‐limited conditions, the damage rate increased. Unexpectedly, repair rates were also stimulated under N‐limited conditions, although this was insufficient to counteract the increase in damage, so the overall effect of N limitation was an enhancement of UVBR‐induced inhibition of photosynthesis.  相似文献   

9.
10.
By 2100, greenhouse gases are predicted to reduce ozone and cloud cover over the tropics causing increased exposure of organisms to harmful ultraviolet-B radiation (UVBR). UVBR damages DNA and is an important modulator of immune function and disease susceptibility in humans and other vertebrates. The effect of UVBR on invertebrate immune function is largely unknown, but UVBR together with ultraviolet-A radiation impairs an insect immune response that utilizes melanin, a pigment that also protects against UVBR-induced DNA damage. If UVBR weakens insect immunity, then it may make insect disease vectors more susceptible to infection with pathogens of socioeconomic and public health importance. In the tropics, where UVBR is predicted to increase, the mosquito-borne dengue virus (DENV), is prevalent and a growing threat to humans. We therefore examined the effect of UVBR on the mosquito Aedes aegypti, the primary vector for DENV, to better understand the potential implications of increased tropical UVBR for mosquito-borne disease risk. We found that exposure to a UVBR dose that caused significant larval mortality approximately doubled the probability that surviving females would become infected with DENV, despite this UVBR dose having no effect on the expression of an effector gene involved in antiviral immunity. We also found that females exposed to a lower UVBR dose were more likely to have low fecundity even though this UVBR dose had no effect on larval size or activity, pupal cuticular melanin content, or adult mass, metabolic rate, or flight capacity. We conclude that future increases in tropical UVBR associated with anthropogenic global change may have the benefit of reducing mosquito-borne disease risk for humans by reducing mosquito fitness, but this benefit may be eroded if it also makes mosquitoes more likely to be infected with deadly pathogens.  相似文献   

11.
The effects on UVB radiation on a subtidal, cohesive-sediment biofilm dominated by the diatom Gyrosigma balticum (Ehrenberg) Rabenhorst were investigated. Chlorophyll fluorescence parameters ( F v/ F m, φPSII), pigment concentrations, cell densities, and carbohydrate fractions were measured in four treatments (no UVBR, ambient UVBR, +7%, and +15% enhancement with UVBR). Enhanced UVBR was provided by a computer-controlled system directly linked to natural diel UVBR levels. Increases in φPSII values in the UVBR-enhanced treatments and a decrease in the steady-state fluorescence yield ( F s) from the surface of the biofilms during the middle and latter part of daily exposure periods suggested that G. balticum responded to enhanced UVBR by migrating down into the sediment. Diatoms in the +15% UVBR treatment also had significantly higher concentrations of β-carotene after 5 days of treatment. Although G. balticum responded to enhanced UVBR by migration and increased β-carotene concentrations, significant reduction in maximum quantum yield of PSII ( F v/ F m) and in minimal fluorescence ( F o) and decreases in cell densities occurred after 5 days. Concentrations of different carbohydrate fractions (colloidal carbohydrate, glucan, exopolymers [EPS]) associated with diatom biomass and motility also decreased in the UVBR-enhanced treatments. Short-term responses (migration) to avoid UVBR appear insufficient to prevent longer-term decreases in photosynthetic potential and biofilm carbohydrate concentration and biomass.  相似文献   

12.
Emiliania huxleyi (Lohm.) Hay et Miller is an important component of the phytoplankton in open ocean waters. The sensitivity of this cosmopolitan alga to natural levels of UVB radiation has never been tested. Since DNA is believed to be a major target of natural UVB radiation (UVBR: 280–315 nm) in living cells, experiments with E. huxleyi were performed using growth rate reduction and DNA damage as indicators of UVBR stress. Specific growth rate, cell volume, pigment content, and CPD (cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer) formation (a measure for DNA damage) were followed during and after prolonged exposure of a series of cultures to a range of UVBR levels. E. huxleyi was found to be very sensitive to UVBR: at a daily weighted UVBR dose of only 400 J·m−2 ·d−1 (BEDDNA300nm), growth was halted. At this UVBR level, both cell volume and contents of the major photosynthetic and photoprotective pigments had increased. The UVBR vulnerability of E. huxleyi cannot be explained by a high potential for cyclobutane thymine dimer formation (the most abundant CPD type) due to a high T content of nuclear DNA: the CG content of this E. huxleyi strain is high (68%) compared with other species. The high UVBR sensitivity may be related to the stage of the cell cycle during UVBR exposure, in combination with low repair capacity. It is concluded that E. huxleyi may experience UVBR stress through the formation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, with subsequent low repair capacity and thereby arrest of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

13.
Garbary  David J.  Young Kim  Kwang  Hoffman  Jennie 《Hydrobiologia》2004,512(1-3):165-170
Continuous exposure for 7–10 days to 60% of ambient levels (sea level at mid-day in December) of UV-A and UV-B radiation caused cytological damage to regenerating fragments of Griffithsia pacifica under laboratory conditions. There was high mortality of individual cells and entire fragments in UV treated filaments. Rhizoid initiation was slower and rhizoids grew more slowly following UV treatment. After 7 days, UV radiated thalli showed chloroplast and nuclear degeneration. In addition, filaments tended to disarticulate so that single or groups of apparently healthy cells were common in the medium. These data suggest that the subtidal habitat of G. pacifica is based in part on lack of tolerance to UV radiation, and that UV protection mechanisms are not inducible or insufficient to prevent the accumulation of damage in this species.  相似文献   

14.
It is now well established that ultraviolet radiation (UVR) may have detrimental, even lethal effects on zooplankters. Unlike copepods and other holoplankters, which may avoid UVR by undergoing diel vertical migration, larvae of many decapod crustaceans and fishes recruit to adult populations by remaining in near-surface waters during the daytime. Consequently, they are exposed to biologically damaging UVR. A possible adaptation in these larvae is chromatophores, which may absorb UVR by expanding in high light environments. The supposition is that expanded chromatophores more effectively absorb UVR, but there is some fitness cost to having expanded chromatophores in low light environments. Since the ratio of visible light to UVR in the water column changes as result of season, latitude, dissolved organic carbon, and a host of other factors, the benefits of chromatophores would be maximized if they responded specifically to UVR. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the chromatophores of crab postlarvae (megalopae) could expand in response to UVR. Megalopae of two species of crabs (Cancer oregonensis, Telmessus cheiragonus) were collected from large surface-swarms during mid-day as they recruited onshore in early May 1998 at Friday Harbor, Washington, USA. Dark-adapted megalopae (held in the dark for 8 h before experiments) were exposed to UVR (UVBR+UVAR, 280-400 nm), UVAR (320-400 nm), and light (400-1700 nm) in the laboratory. Chromatophores expanded after only minutes of exposure to UVR, UVAR, and light for both species. Two alternative hypotheses may explain why both harmful and comparatively benign wavelengths stimulated chromatophores to rapidly expand. First, larvae may not distinguish among different wavelengths, which, if true, would increase the vulnerability of these larvae to intensifying UVBR due to ozone depletion. Second, chromatophores have functions other than blocking UVR, such as crypsis and thermoregulation, and must respond to light for these other functions to operate.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: This study has shown that in Fucus serratus and Fucus distichus, young zygotes and embryos are highly susceptible to elevated levels of both UVA (UVAR) and UVB radiation (UVBR). Zygotes treated with UVAR are able to polarise and germinate, but are very slow to divide; if they do, they often have skewed division planes or deformed rhizoids. Those treated with UVAR and UVBR remain spherical, they do not polarise, germinate to form rhizoids or undergo cell division. We suggest that the UVR may be affecting the cytoskeleton. Conversely, zygotes and embryos of Fucus spiralis are able to withstand these same UVR levels and, at the light microscope level, appear to develop normally. When the brown algal phenolic compound phloroglucinol was placed in a filter covering the developing embryos, normal development was seen under all treatments. Phenolic compounds protect the developing fucoids from UVR. In comparison with the other two species, Fucus spiralis grows high up on the shore and is exposed for much longer periods of time and, presumably, to higher levels of natural UVR. The failure of the juvenile stages of F. serratus and F. distichus to withstand UVR stress may have implications for the continued survival of these species in the intertidal, and may prove detrimental to the population as a whole if UVR levels increase.  相似文献   

16.
Growth of a near‐isogenic line (NIL) for the purple leaf gene Pl of rice with a genetic background of Taichung 65 (T‐65) rice was significantly retarded by supplementary ultraviolet‐B radiation (UV‐B), despite the fact that the amounts of UV‐absorbing compounds and anthocyanins in NIL were significantly higher than those in T‐65. In order to understand the role of flavonoids in UV‐B induced damage protection in T‐65 and the NIL, both the (1) relationships between changes in the steady state of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) levels and changes in accumulation of anthocyanins and UV‐absorbing compounds in leaves with leaf age, and (2) the susceptibility to CPD induction by UV‐B radiation and the ability to photorepair CPD were examined. Although supplementary UV‐B elevated the steady state of CPD levels in leaves in both strains, the level in the leaf of the NIL was higher than that in T‐65 at any time. The susceptibility to CPD induction by short‐term (challenge) UV‐B exposure was lower in the NIL than in T‐65. On the other hand, the CPD photorepair was also lower in the leaves of the NIL than in those of T‐65. The decrease in CPD‐photorepair in the NIL was due to a lowering of the leaf‐penetrating blue/UV‐A radiation, which is effective for photoreactivation by photolyase, by anthocyanins. Thus, accumulation of anthocyanins and UV‐absorbing compounds did not effectively function as screening against damage caused by elevated UV‐B radiation in the NIL, and the retardation of growth in the NIL resulted from its lower ability to photorepair CPD by higher amounts of anthocyanins.  相似文献   

17.
As a source of agar, the red macroalga Gelidium floridanum is a seaweed of great economic importance. However, it grows in a region exposed to high ultraviolet B radiation (UVBR). Therefore, to study the in vitro effect of UVBR on this plant, apical segments of G. floridanum were cultivated and exposed to photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) at 80?μmol photons m?2?s?1 and PAR + UVBR at 1.6?W?m?2 at 3?h per day for 7?days. The samples were processed for electron microscopy, and agar yield, growth rates, mitochondrial activity, protein levels, chlorophyll a, phycobiliproteins, carotenoids and phenolic compounds, and photosynthetic performance were examined. After 7?days of exposure to PAR + UVBR, G. floridanum experienced ultrastructural damage that was primarily observed in the internal organization of chloroplasts, increased cell wall thickness, as well as increased volume of plastoglobuli and free ribosomes. Moreover, this exposure might have caused photodamage and photoinhibition of photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll a and phycobiliproteins), leading to a decrease in photosynthetic efficiency, relative electron transport rate, and maximum photosynthetic rate. These phenomena were matched with a corresponding decrease in growth rates and depigmentation, combined with partial necrosis of the apical segments exposed to PAR + UVBR. Additionally, the UVBR-induced damage elicited a marked cellular antioxidant response, possibly as a consequence of free radical generation.  相似文献   

18.
The green macroalga Ulva pertusa Kjellman produced UV‐B absorbing compounds with a prominent absorption maximum at 294 nm in response only to UV‐B, and the amounts induced were proportional to the UV‐B doses. Under a 12:12‐h light:dark regime, the production of UV‐absorbing compounds occurred only during the exposure periods with little turnover in the dark. There was significant reduction in growth in parallel with the production of UV‐B absorbing compounds. The polychromatic action spectrum for the induction of UV‐B absorbing compounds in U. pertusa exhibits a major peak at 292 nm with a smaller peak at 311.5 nm. No significant induction was detected above 354.5 nm, and radiation below 285 nm caused significant reduction in the levels of UV‐B absorbing compounds. After UV‐B irradiation at 1.0 W·m?2 for 9 h, the optimal photosynthetic quantum yield of the samples with UV‐B absorbing compounds slightly increased relative to the initial value, whereas that of thalli lacking the compounds declined to 30%–34% of the initial followed by subsequent recovery in dim light of up to 84%–85% of the initial value. There was a positive and significant relationship between the amount of UV‐B absorbing compounds with antioxidant activity as determined by the α,α‐diphenyl‐β‐picrylhydrazyl scavenging assay. In addition to mat‐forming characteristics and light‐driven photorepair, the existence and antioxidant capacity of UV‐B absorbing compounds may confer U. pertusa a greater selective advantage over other macroalgae, thereby enabling them to thrive in the presence of intense UV‐B radiation.  相似文献   

19.
Ultraviolet B radiation (UVBR) damages the DNA of exposed cells, causing dimers to form between adjacent pyrimidine nucleotides. These dimers block DNA replication, causing mutations and apoptosis. Most organisms utilize biochemical or biophysical DNA repair strategies to restore DNA structure; however, as with most biological reactions, these processes are likely to be thermally sensitive. Tadpoles exposed to elevated UVBR at low environmental temperatures have significantly higher rates of mortality and developmental deformities compared with tadpoles exposed to the same levels of UVBR at higher environmental temperatures. We hypothesized that low environmental temperatures impair the primary enzymatic (photolyase) DNA repair pathway in amphibians, leading to the accumulation of DNA damage. To test this hypothesis, we compared DNA repair rates and photolyase gene expression patterns in Limnodynastes peronii. Tadpoles were acutely exposed to UVBR for 1 hr at either 20 or 30°C, and we measured DNA damage and photolyase expression levels at intervals following this exposure. Temperature had a significant effect on the rate of DNA repair, with repair at 30°C occurring twice as fast as repair at 20°C. Photolyase gene expression (6‐4 PP and CPD) was significantly upregulated by UVBR exposure, with expression levels increasing within 6 hr of UVBR exposure. CPD expression levels were not significantly affected by temperature, but 6‐4 PP expression was significantly higher in tadpoles in the 30°C treatment within 12 hr of UVBR exposure. These data support the hypothesis that DNA repair rates are thermally sensitive in tadpoles and may explain why enigmatic amphibian declines are higher in montane regions where UVBR levels are naturally elevated and environmental temperatures are lower.  相似文献   

20.
The wavelength dependency of xanthophyll cycling in two marine microalgae (Thalassiosira weissflogii and Dunaliella tertiolecta) was studied by establishing biological weighting functions (BWFs) during exposure to natural ultraviolet radiation. High-(HL) and low-(LL) light-acclimated cultures of both species were exposed outdoors for up to 60 min under a series of UVR (280–400 nm) cut-off filters, after which the de-epoxidation state of xanthophyll cycle pigments, radiocarbon assimilation and photochemical quantum yield were measured. Exposures were repeated 4–8 times during the daily cycle to create exposure–response curves for each wavelength condition. UVR affected the three target processes significantly in both species and biological weights increased with decreasing wavelength, particularly in the UVBR region (280–315 nm). Minor wavelength dependency was observed between 315 and 360 nm. After BWF normalization to 300 nm, the LL cultures showed highly similar responses when comparing the three target processes, while the BWFs for the HL cultures differed significantly. The observed enhanced xanthophyll cycling activity in the UVR region implied that xanthophylls had an active role in diminishing UVR stress. However, this enhancement seems to be an indirect effect of damage within the dark reactions of photosynthesis. Hence, another vital target process further downstream in the photosynthetic process, possibly involved in the dark reactions, seems to be responsible for the high similarity in BWFs.  相似文献   

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