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1.
Havaux M  Dall'osto L  Bassi R 《Plant physiology》2007,145(4):1506-1520
The ch1 mutant of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) lacks chlorophyll (Chl) b. Leaves of this mutant are devoid of photosystem II (PSII) Chl-protein antenna complexes and have a very low capacity of nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) of Chl fluorescence. Lhcb5 was the only PSII antenna protein that accumulated to a significant level in ch1 mutant leaves, but the apoprotein did not assemble in vivo with Chls to form a functional antenna. The abundance of Lhca proteins was also reduced to approximately 20% of the wild-type level. ch1 was crossed with various xanthophyll mutants to analyze the antioxidant activity of carotenoids unbound to PSII antenna. Suppression of zeaxanthin by crossing ch1 with npq1 resulted in oxidative stress in high light, while removing other xanthophylls or the PSII protein PsbS had no such effect. The tocopherol-deficient ch1 vte1 double mutant was as sensitive to high light as ch1 npq1, and the triple mutant ch1 npq1 vte1 exhibited an extreme sensitivity to photooxidative stress, indicating that zeaxanthin and tocopherols have cumulative effects. Conversely, constitutive accumulation of zeaxanthin in the ch1 npq2 double mutant led to an increased phototolerance relative to ch1. Comparison of ch1 npq2 with another zeaxanthin-accumulating mutant (ch1 lut2) that lacks lutein suggests that protection of polyunsaturated lipids by zeaxanthin is enhanced when lutein is also present. During photooxidative stress, alpha-tocopherol noticeably decreased in ch1 npq1 and increased in ch1 npq2 relative to ch1, suggesting protection of vitamin E by high zeaxanthin levels. Our results indicate that the antioxidant activity of zeaxanthin, distinct from NPQ, can occur in the absence of PSII light-harvesting complexes. The capacity of zeaxanthin to protect thylakoid membrane lipids is comparable to that of vitamin E but noticeably higher than that of all other xanthophylls of Arabidopsis leaves.  相似文献   

2.
In green plants, the xanthophyll carotenoid zeaxanthin is synthesized transiently under conditions of excess light energy and participates in photoprotection. In the Arabidopsis lut2 npq2 double mutant, all xanthophylls were replaced constitutively by zeaxanthin, the only xanthophyll whose synthesis was not impaired. The relative proportions of the different chlorophyll antenna proteins were strongly affected with respect to the wild-type strain. The major antenna, LHCII, did not form trimers, and its abundance was strongly reduced as was CP26, albeit to a lesser extent. In contrast, CP29, CP24, LHCI proteins, and the PSI and PSII core complexes did not undergo major changes. PSII-LHCII supercomplexes were not detectable while the PSI-LHCI supercomplex remained unaffected. The effect of zeaxanthin accumulation on the stability of the different Lhc proteins was uneven: the LHCII proteins from lut2 npq2 had a lower melting temperature as compared with the wild-type complex while LHCI showed increased resistance to heat denaturation. Consistent with the loss of LHCII, light-state 1 to state 2 transitions were suppressed, the photochemical efficiency in limiting light was reduced and photosynthesis was saturated at higher light intensities in lut2 npq2 leaves, resulting in a photosynthetic phenotype resembling that of high light-acclimated leaves. Zeaxanthin functioned in vivo as a light-harvesting accessory pigment in lut2 npq2 chlorophyll antennae. As a whole, the in vivo data are consistent with the results obtained by using recombinant Lhc proteins reconstituted in vitro with purified zeaxanthin. While PSII photoinhibition was similar in wild type and lut2 npq2 exposed to high light at low temperature, the double mutant was much more resistant to photooxidative stress and lipid peroxidation than the wild type. The latter observation is consistent with an antioxidant and lipid protective role of zeaxanthin in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Acclimation to changing environments, such as increases in light intensity, is necessary, especially for the survival of sedentary organisms like plants. To learn more about the importance of ascorbate in the acclimation of plants to high light (HL), vtc2, an ascorbate-deficient mutant of Arabidopsis, and the double mutants vtc2npq4 and vtc2npq1 were tested for growth in low light and HL and compared with the wild type. The vtc2 mutant has only 10% to 30% of wild-type levels of ascorbate, vtc2npq4 has lower ascorbate levels and lacks non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (NPQ) because of the absence of the photosystem II protein PsbS, and vtc2npq1 is NPQ deficient and also lacks zeaxanthin in HL but has PsbS. All three genotypes were able to grow in HL and had wild-type levels of Lhcb1, cytochrome f, PsaF, and 2-cysteine peroxiredoxin. However, the mutants had lower electron transport and oxygen evolution rates and lower quantum efficiency of PSII compared with the wild type, implying that they experienced chronic photooxidative stress. The mutants lacking NPQ in addition to ascorbate were only slightly more affected than vtc2. All three mutants had higher glutathione levels than the wild type in HL, suggesting a possible compensation for the lower ascorbate content. These results demonstrate the importance of ascorbate for the long-term acclimation of plants to HL.  相似文献   

4.
Vitamin E is considered a major antioxidant in biomembranes, but little evidence exists for this function in plants under photooxidative stress. Leaf discs of two vitamin E mutants, a tocopherol cyclase mutant (vte1) and a homogentisate phytyl transferase mutant (vte2), were exposed to high light stress at low temperature, which resulted in bleaching and lipid photodestruction. However, this was not observed in whole plants exposed to long-term high light stress, unless the stress conditions were extreme (very low temperature and very high light), suggesting compensatory mechanisms for vitamin E deficiency under physiological conditions. We identified two such mechanisms: nonphotochemical energy dissipation (NPQ) in photosystem II (PSII) and synthesis of zeaxanthin. Inhibition of NPQ in the double mutant vte1 npq4 led to a marked photoinhibition of PSII, suggesting protection of PSII by tocopherols. vte1 plants accumulated more zeaxanthin in high light than the wild type, and inhibiting zeaxanthin synthesis in the vte1 npq1 double mutant resulted in PSII photoinhibition accompanied by extensive oxidation of lipids and pigments. The single mutants npq1, npq4, vte2, and vte1 showed little sensitivity to the stress treatments. We conclude that, in cooperation with the xanthophyll cycle, vitamin E fulfills at least two different functions in chloroplasts at the two major sites of singlet oxygen production: preserving PSII from photoinactivation and protecting membrane lipids from photooxidation.  相似文献   

5.
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii double mutant npq2 lor1 lacks the beta, epsilon-carotenoids lutein and loroxanthin as well as all beta,beta-epoxycarotenoids derived from zeaxanthin (e.g. violaxanthin and neoxanthin). Thus, the only carotenoids present in the thylakoid membranes of the npq2 lor1 cells are beta-carotene and zeaxanthin. The effect of these mutations on the photochemical apparatus assembly and function was investigated. In cells of the mutant strain, the content of photosystem-II (PSII) and photosystem-I (PSI) was similar to that of the wild type, but npq2 lor1 had a significantly smaller PSII light-harvesting Chl antenna size. In contrast, the Chl antenna size of PSI was not truncated in the mutant. SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis qualitatively revealed the presence of all LHCII and LHCI apoproteins in the thylakoid membrane of the mutant. The results showed that some of the LHCII and most of the LHCI were assembled and functionally connected with PSII and PSI, respectively. Photon conversion efficiency measurements, based on the initial slope of the light-saturation curve of photosynthesis and on the yield of Chl a fluorescence in vivo, showed similar efficiencies. However, a significantly greater light intensity was required for the saturation of photosynthesis in the mutant than in the wild type. It is concluded that zeaxanthin can successfully replace lutein and violaxanthin in most of the functional light-harvesting antenna of the npq2 lor1 mutant.  相似文献   

6.
It is commonly accepted that the photosystem II subunit S protein, PsbS, is required for the dissipation of excess light energy in a process termed ‘non‐photochemical quenching’ (NPQ). This process prevents photo‐oxidative damage of photosystem II (PSII) thus avoiding photoinhibition which can decrease plant fitness and productivity. In this study Arabidopsis plants lacking PsbS (the npq4 mutant) were found to possess a competent mechanism of excess energy dissipation that protects against photoinhibitory damage. The process works on a slower timescale, taking about 1 h to reach the same level of NPQ achieved in the wild type in just a few minutes. The NPQ in npq4 was found to display very similar characteristics to the fast NPQ in the wild type. Firstly, it prevented the irreversible light‐induced closure of PSII reaction centres. Secondly, it was uncoupler‐sensitive, and thus triggered by the ΔpH across the thylakoid membrane. Thirdly, it was accompanied by significant quenching of the fluorescence under conditions when all PSII reaction centres were open (Fo state). Fourthly, it was accompanied by NPQ‐related absorption changes (ΔA535). Finally, it was modulated by the presence of the xanthophyll cycle carotenoid zeaxanthin. The existence of a mechanism of photoprotective energy dissipation in plants lacking PsbS suggests that this protein plays the role of a kinetic modulator of the energy dissipation process in the PSII light‐harvesting antenna, allowing plants to rapidly track fluctuations of light intensity in the environment, and is not the primary cause of NPQ or a direct carrier of the pigment acting as the non‐photochemical quencher.  相似文献   

7.
The npq1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. has no xanthophyll cycle due to a lack of functional violaxanthin de-epoxidase. Short-term exposure (<2 days) of detached leaves or whole plants to the combination of high photon flux density (1,000 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) and low temperature (10 degrees C) resulted in PSII photoinhibition which was more acute in npq1 than in the wild type. This increased photosensitivity of npql at chilling temperature was attributable to the inhibition of nonphotochemical energy quenching (NPQ) and not to the absence of zeaxanthin itself. In contrast to PSII, PSI was found to be phototolerant to chilling stress in the light in both genotypes. In the long term (10-12 days), PSII activity recovered in both npql and wild type, indicating that A. thaliana is able to acclimate to chilling stress in the light independently of the xanthophyll cycle. In npql, photoacclimation involved a substantial reduction of the light-harvesting pigment antenna of PSII and an improvement of photosynthetic electron transport. Chilling stress also induced synthesis of early light-inducedproteins (ELIPs) which, in the long term, disappeared in npql and remained stable in the wild type. In both genotypes, photoacclimation at low temperature induced the accumulation of various antioxidants including carotenoids (except beta-carotene), vitamin E (alpha- and -gamma-tocopherol) and non-photosynthetic pigments (anthocyanins and other flavonoids). Analysis of flavonoid-deficient tt mutants revealed that UV/blue-light-absorbing flavonols have a strong protective function against excess visible radiations. In contrast to the defect in npq1, the absence of flavonoids could not be overcome in the long term by compensatory mechanisms, leading to extensive photooxidative and photoinhibitory damage to the chloroplasts. Depth profiling of the leaf pigments by phase-resolved photoacoustic spectroscopy showed that the flavonoid-related photoprotection was due to light trapping, which decreased chlorophyll excitation by blue light. In contrast to flavonoids, the xanthophyll cycle and the associated NPQ seem to be mainly relevant to the protection of photosynthesis against sudden increases in light intensity.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Johnson MP  Zia A  Ruban AV 《Planta》2012,235(1):193-204
The xanthophylls of the light-harvesting complexes of photosystem II (LHCII), zeaxanthin, and lutein are thought to be essential for non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). NPQ is a process of photoprotective energy dissipation in photosystem II (PSII). The major rapidly reversible component of NPQ, qE, is activated by the transmembrane proton gradient, and involves the quenching of antenna chlorophyll excited states by the xanthophylls lutein and zeaxanthin. Using diaminodurene (DAD), a mediator of cyclic electron flow around photosystem I, to enhance ΔpH we demonstrate that qE can still be formed in the absence of lutein and light-induced formation of zeaxanthin in chloroplasts derived from the normally qE-deficient lut2npq1 mutant of Arabidopsis. The qE induced by high ΔpH in lut2npq1 chloroplasts quenched the level of fluorescence when all PSII reaction centers were in the open state (F o state), protected PSII reaction centers from photoinhibition, was sensitive to the uncoupler nigericin, and was accompanied by absorption changes in the 410–565 nm region. Titrations show the ΔpH threshold for activation of qE in lut2npq1 chloroplasts lies outside the normal physiological range and is highly cooperative. Comparison of quenching in isolated trimeric (LHCII) and monomeric (CP26) light-harvesting complexes from lut2npq1 plants revealed a similarly shifted pH dependency compared with wild-type LHCII. The implications for the roles of lutein and zeaxanthin as direct quenchers of excitation energy are discussed. Furthermore, we argue that the control over the proton-antenna association constant, pK, occurs via influence of xanthophyll structure on the interconnected phenomena of light-harvesting antenna reorganization/aggregation and hydrophobicity.  相似文献   

10.
The aba4-1 mutant completely lacks neoxanthin but retains all other xanthophyll species. The missing neoxanthin in light-harvesting complex (Lhc) proteins is compensated for by higher levels of violaxanthin, albeit with lower capacity for photoprotection compared with proteins with wild-type levels of neoxanthin. Detached leaves of aba4-1 were more sensitive to oxidative stress than the wild type when exposed to high light and incubated in a solution of photosensitizer agents. Both treatments caused more rapid pigment bleaching and lipid oxidation in aba4-1 than wild-type plants, suggesting that neoxanthin acts as an antioxidant within the photosystem II (PSII) supercomplex in thylakoids. While neoxanthin-depleted Lhc proteins and leaves had similar sensitivity as the wild type to hydrogen peroxide and singlet oxygen, they were more sensitive to superoxide anions. aba4-1 intact plants were not more sensitive than the wild type to high-light stress, indicating the existence of compensatory mechanisms of photoprotection involving the accumulation of zeaxanthin. However, the aba4-1 npq1 double mutant, lacking zeaxanthin and neoxanthin, underwent stronger PSII photoinhibition and more extensive oxidation of pigments than the npq1 mutant, which still contains neoxanthin. We conclude that neoxanthin preserves PSII from photoinactivation and protects membrane lipids from photooxidation by reactive oxygen species. Neoxanthin appears particularly active against superoxide anions produced by the Mehler's reaction, whose rate is known to be enhanced in abiotic stress conditions.  相似文献   

11.
We examined the effect of manipulating photosystem II (PSII) redox poise on respiratory flux in leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana. Measurements were made on wild-type (WT) plants and npq4 mutant plants deficient in non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). Two experiments were carried out. In the first experiment, WT and mutant warm-grown plants were exposed to three different irradiance regimes [75, 150 and 300 micromol photosynthetically active radiation (PAR)], and leaf dark respiration was measured in conjunction with PSII redox poise. In the second experiment, WT and mutant warm-grown plants were shifted to 5 degrees C and 75, 150 or 300 micromol PAR, and dark respiration was measured alongside PSII redox poise in cold-treated and cold-developed leaves. Despite significant differences in PSII redox poise between genotypes and irradiance treatments, neither genotype nor growth irradiance had any effect upon the rate of respiration in warm-grown, cold-treated or cold-developed leaves. We conclude that changes in PSII redox poise, at least within the range experienced here, have no direct impacts on rates of leaf dark respiration, and that the respiratory cold acclimation response is unrelated to changes in chloroplast redox poise.  相似文献   

12.
Lhcb1-2 and PsbS proteins of photosystem II (PSII) have important roles in photoprotective thermal energy dissipation of the absorbed excess light energy. The light responses of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters were analyzed to examine how the absence of Lhcb1-2 or PsbS proteins can modify the energy allocation patterns of absorbed light energy in PSII using an antisense construct of lhcb2 and a psbS deletion (npq4-1) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana. Both mutants exhibit reduced Stern–Volmer non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching (NPQ). Here, we have adopted an approach, presented by Hendrickson et al. (Photosynth Res 82:73–81, 2004), to gain a better insight into the mechanism of the NPQ in these mutants. We have found no significant differences in the quantum yields of photochemical energy conversion (ΦPSII) between the mutants and the wild type. Nevertheless, as it was expected, the fraction of the energy, which is dissipated as heat via regulated pathways in PSII (ΦNPQ) for both mutants, were reduced as compared to the wild type. In a complementary way, the extent of non-regulated non-photochemical energy loss in PSII (ΦNO) for both mutants was significantly higher than that in the wild type. This reflects, together with the lower ΦNPQ (or NPQ) values, suboptimal capacity of photoprotective reactions at higher light intensities.  相似文献   

13.
Photoinhibition is light-induced inactivation of PSII. Hypothesesabout the photoreceptor(s) of photoinhibition include the Chlantenna of PSII, manganese of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC),uncoupled Chl and iron–sulfur centres. We measured theaction spectrum of photoinhibition in vivo from wild-type Arabidopsisthaliana L. and from the npq1-2 and npq4-1 mutants defectivein non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of excitations of the PSIIantenna. The in vivo action spectrum was found to resemble closelythe in vitro action spectra published for photoinhibition. Wecompared the action spectrum with absorbance spectra of modelcompounds of the OEC complex and other potential photoreceptorsof photoinhibition. The comparison suggests that both manganeseand Chl function as photoreceptors in photoinhibition. In accordancewith the function of two types of photoreceptors in photoinhibition,NPQ was found to offer only partial protection against photoinhibitionat visible wavelengths. The low protective efficiency of NPQsupports the conclusion that the Chl antenna of PSII is notthe only photoreceptor of photoinhibition. Comparison of theaction spectrum of photoinhibition with the emission spectrumof sunlight shows that the UV part of sunlight is responsiblefor the major part of photoinhibition under natural conditions. (Received September 7, 2005; Accepted January 4, 2006)  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthetic light harvesting in plants is regulated by a pH- and xanthophyll-dependent nonphotochemical quenching process (qE) that dissipates excess absorbed light energy and requires the psbS gene product. An Arabidopsis thaliana mutant, npq4-1, lacks qE because of a deletion of the psbS gene, yet it exhibits a semidominant phenotype. Here it is shown that the semidominance is due to a psbS gene dosage effect. Diploid Arabidopsis plants containing two psbS gene copies (wild-type), one psbS gene (npq4-1/NPQ4 heterozygote), and no psbS gene (npq4-1/npq4-1 homozygote) were compared. Heterozygous plants had 56% of the wild-type psbS mRNA level, 58% of the wild-type PsbS protein level, and 60% of the wild-type level of qE. Global analysis of the chlorophyll a fluorescence lifetime distributions revealed three components in wild-type and heterozygous plants, but only a single long lifetime component in npq4-1. The short lifetime distribution associated with qE was inhibited by more than 40% in heterozygous plants compared with the wild type. Thus, the extent of qE measured as either the fractional intensities of the PSII chlorophyll a fluorescence lifetime distributions or steady state intensities was stoichiometrically related to the amount of PsbS protein.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The maximum chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime in isolated photosystem II (PSII) light-harvesting complex (LHCII) antenna is 4 ns; however, it is quenched to 2 ns in intact thylakoid membranes when PSII reaction centers (RCIIs) are closed (Fm). It has been proposed that the closed state of RCIIs is responsible for the quenching. We investigated this proposal using a new, to our knowledge, model system in which the concentration of RCIIs was highly reduced within the thylakoid membrane. The system was developed in Arabidopsis thaliana plants under long-term treatment with lincomycin, a chloroplast protein synthesis inhibitor. The treatment led to 1), a decreased concentration of RCIIs to 10% of the control level and, interestingly, an increased antenna component; 2), an average reduction in the yield of photochemistry to 0.2; and 3), an increased nonphotochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching (NPQ). Despite these changes, the average fluorescence lifetimes measured in Fm and Fm' (with NPQ) states were nearly identical to those obtained from the control. A 77 K fluorescence spectrum analysis of treated PSII membranes showed the typical features of preaggregation of LHCII, indicating that the state of LHCII antenna in the dark-adapted photosynthetic membrane is sufficient to determine the 2 ns Fm lifetime. Therefore, we conclude that the closed RCs do not cause quenching of excitation in the PSII antenna, and play no role in the formation of NPQ.  相似文献   

17.
Complementary techniques of chlorophyll a fluorescence, steady state CO2 exchange, and O2 release during a multiple turnover flash were applied to compare responses to irradiance for leaves of wild type and psbS mutants. The latter included variants in which the psbS gene was deleted (npq4-1) or possessed a single point mutation (npq4-9). Nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) was reduced by up to 80 and 50%, respectively, in these lines at high irradiance. Analysis of changes in steady-state fluorescence yields and quantum yield of linear electron transport in the context of the reversible radical pair model of Photosystem II (PS II) indicated that NPQ occurs by nonradiative deactivation of chlorophyll singlet states in normal leaves. In contrast, application of the same criteria together with the observed irreversibility of NPQ and decline in density of functional PS II reaction centers following excessive illumination indicated a change in reaction center properties for the psbS deletion phenotype (Npq4-1). Specifically, PS II reaction centers in Npq4-1 convert to a photochemically inactive, yet strongly quenching, form in intense light. The possibility of formation of a carotenoid or chlorophyll cation quencher in the reaction center is discussed. Results for the point mutant phenotype (Npq4-9) were intermediate to those of wild-type and Npq4-1. Furthermore, wild-type leaves exhibited a significant reversible increase in the PS II in vivo rate constant for photochemistry (kP0) in saturating compared to limiting light. Changes in kP0 could not be accounted for in terms of a classic phosphorylation-dependent (state transition) mechanism. Changes in kP0 may arise from alternate pigment—protein conformations that alter the way excitons equilibrate among PS II chromophores. The lack of similar irradiance-dependent changes in kP0 for the psbS mutants suggests a role for the PS II-S protein in the regulation of exciton distribution.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

18.
Abscisic acid (ABA)-deficient mutants of Arabidopsis do not synthesize the epoxy-xanthophylls antheraxanthin, violaxanthin, or neoxanthin. However, thylakoid membranes from these mutants contain 3-fold more zeaxanthin than wild-type plants. This increase in zeaxanthin occurs as a stoichiometric replacement of the missing violaxanthin and neoxanthin within the pigment-protein complexes of both photosystem I and photosystem II (PSII). The retention of zeaxanthin in the dark by ABA-deficient mutants sensitizes the leaves to the development of nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) during the first 2 to 4 min following a dark-light transition. However, the increase in pool size does not result in any increase in steady-state NPQ. When we exposed wild-type and ABA-deficient mutants leaves to twice growth irradiance, the mutants developed lower maximal NPQ but suffered similar photoinhibition to wildtype, measured both as a decline in the ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence and as a loss of functional PSII centers from oxygen flash yield measurements. These results suggest that only a few of the zeaxanthin molecules present within the light-harvesting antenna of PSII may be involved in NPQ and neither the accumulation of a large pool of zeaxanthin within the antenna of PSII nor an increase in conversion of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin will necessarily enhance photoprotective energy dissipation.  相似文献   

19.
To elucidate the effect of ionizing radiation on the non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) oir chlorophyll fluorescence, we analyzed the buildup and release of NPQ inArabidopsis wild-type (WT) andnpq1- 2 mutant plants after gamma-irradiation. Thenpqi- 2 mutant cannot normally induce the buildup of NPQ by a mutation in the violaxamthin de-epoxidase gene. A dose of 50 Gy h for 4 h significantly suppressed such buildup in the mutant and, more noticeably, in the WT. Both the initial rise and maximum level of NPQ were gradually inhibited after gamma-irradiation. In contrast, the release of NPQ and the maximum photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) of Photosystem II were largely unaffected in either genotype. This inhibition of NPQ buildup could be partly attributable to a significant decrease in the content of carotenoids, including xanthophyll pigments. Moreover, inhibition that was dependent on the xanthophyll cycle substantially enhanced the sensitivity of irradiated leaves to a photoinhibitory illumination of 800 |imol photons m 2 s"1. The difference in Fv/Fm values between the WT andnpq1- 2 under that photoinhibitory level of illumination was much smaller in the irradiated leaves than in the control. However, NPQ inhibition did not cause a significant difference in efficiency between WT and mutant when both were treated with UV-B irradiance of 2.4 W m 2. Therefore, we suggest that a significant decrease in carotenoid content after gamma-irradiation should partially contribute to the enhanced sensitivity of irradiated plants, at least to high-ligtil photoinhibition. This is accomplished by suppressing the thermal dissipation of excess light absorbed by photosynthetic pigments.  相似文献   

20.
Zia A  Johnson MP  Ruban AV 《Planta》2011,233(6):1253-1264
The efficiency of photosystem II antenna complexes (LHCs) in higher plants must be regulated to avoid potentially damaging overexcitation of the reaction centre in excess light. Regulation is achieved via a feedback mechanism known as non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), triggered the proton gradient (ΔpH) causing heat dissipation within the LHC antenna. ΔpH causes protonation of the LHCs, the PsbS protein and triggers the enzymatic de-epoxidation of the xanthophyll, violaxanthin, to zeaxanthin. A key step in understanding the mechanism is to decipher whether PsbS and zeaxanthin cooperate to promote NPQ. To obtain clues about their respective functions we studied the effects of PsbS and zeaxanthin on the rates of NPQ formation and relaxation in wild-type Arabidopsis leaves and those overexpressing PsbS (L17) or lacking zeaxanthin (npq1). Overexpression of PsbS was found to increase the rate of NPQ formation, as previously reported for zeaxanthin. However, PsbS overexpression also increased the rate of NPQ relaxation, unlike zeaxanthin, which is known decrease the rate. The enhancement of PsbS levels in plants lacking zeaxanthin (npq1) by either acclimation to high light or crossing with L17 plants showed that the effect of PsbS was independent of zeaxanthin. PsbS levels also affected the kinetics of the 535 nm absorption change (ΔA535), which monitors the formation of the conformational state of the LHC antenna associated with NPQ, in an identical way. The antagonistic action of PsbS and zeaxanthin with respect to NPQ and ΔA535 relaxation kinetics suggests that the two molecules have distinct regulatory functions.  相似文献   

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