Photoinhibition of Photosystem I at Chilling Temperature and Subsequent Recovery in Arabidopsis thaliana
Author(s) -
Suping Zhang,
Henrik Vibe Scheller
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
plant and cell physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.975
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1471-9053
pISSN - 0032-0781
DOI - 10.1093/pcp/pch180
Subject(s) - photoinhibition , thylakoid , p700 , photosystem ii , arabidopsis thaliana , biophysics , photosynthetic reaction centre , photosystem i , arabidopsis , chemistry , photosynthesis , chloroplast , botany , biology , biochemistry , mutant , gene
Chilling-induced photoinhibition and subsequent recovery was studied in Arabidopsis thaliana exposed to 4 degrees C and 150 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1). PSII showed progressive damage with a 14% decrease in quantum yield after 8 h exposure. In contrast, the damage to PSI leveled off after 8 h with a decrease in in vitro NADP+ photoreduction activity of around 32%. In vivo P700 measurements demonstrated that antenna efficiency was decreased by the photoinhibitory treatment. Measurements of P700 and immunoblotting demonstrated that the damaged PSI was not degraded during the 8 h light-chilling treatment, but after 12 h recovery at 20 degrees C, no damaged PSI remained in the thylakoids. Thus, degradation of damaged PSI is a step in the recovery and not a direct result of photodamage. Unlike photodamaged PSII, the PSI core complex is not repaired but completely degraded. In contrast, light harvesting complex I proteins have a slow turnover. PSII recovered completely within 8 h after transfer to 20 degrees C whereas PSI activity recovered very slowly, and the amount of PSI on a leaf area basis remained low even after 1 week at 20 degrees C. The results show that damage, protein turnover and recovery are well separated processes in Arabidopsis.
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