In the lycophyte Selaginella martensii is the "extra-qT" related to energy spillover? Insights into photoprotection in ancestral vascular plants
Pancaldi S.; Ferroni L.; Giovanardi M.; Aro E.; Baldisserotto C.; Angeleri M.; Cucuzza S.; Pagliano C.
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042718523
Tiivistelmä
Lycophytes are early diverging vascular plants, representing a minor
group as compared to the dominating euphyllophytes, mostly angiosperms.
Having maximally developed in a CO2-rich atmosphere, extant
lycophytes are characterized by a low carbon fixing capacity, which is
compensated by a marked ability to induce the non-photochemical
quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (NPQ). Different kinetic
components contribute to NPQ, in particular the fast relaxing
high-energy quenching qE, the middle relaxing qT, and the slowly
relaxing qI. Unlike angiosperms, lycophytes enhance the qT component
under high light, originating from an "extra-qT". In this research, we
analyze whether in Selaginella martensii the extra-qT can reflect a
photosystem (PS) I-based quenching mechanism activated upon saturation
of qE capacity. From comparative analyses of fluorescence quenching
parameters, carbon fixation, in vivo low- and room-temperature
fluorescence spectroscopy, and thylakoid protein phosphorylation, it is
proposed that the extra-qT is not mechanistically separate from the
ordinary qT. The results suggest a relationship between qT and
photoprotective energy spillover to PSI, which is activated upon sensing
the excitation energy pressure inside PSII and is possibly facilitated
by phosphorylation of Lhcb6, a minor antenna protein of PSII. Energy
spillover emphasizes 77K fluorescence emission from PSI core (F714) and
becomes more relevant at irradiance levels corresponding to the CO2-limited,
potentially photoinhibiting phase of photosynthesis. At the highest
irradiances, when Lhcb6 phosphorylation potential has been saturated,
the major LHCII increases in turn its phosphorylation level, probably
leading to the full exploitation of PSI as a safe excitation sink. It is
suggested that the low photosynthetic capacity of lycophytes could
allow an easier experimental access to the use of PSI as a safe
excitation quencher for PSII, a debated, emerging issue about thylakoid
photoprotection in angiosperms.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]