The effect of UV-A radiation (365 nm) and the protective effect of preillumination with red light (RL, 664 nm, 10 min) or with a combination of red and far-red light (FRL, 727 nm, 10 min) on the activity of the PSII as well as the expression levels of selected genes, especially those encoding chloroplast proteins (sAPX, tAPX, CAB1, and D1), were studied in leaves of the 26-d-old hy3 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, which is deficient in the phytochrome B apoprotein. The effects were compared with corresponding effects observed in the hy2 mutant of A. thaliana, which is deficient in the phytochrome chromophore. Illumination with UV-A decreased the photosynthetic pigment content, the maximum photochemical quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm), and the effective quantum yield of PSII (ΦPSII). The reduction of the Fv/Fm ratio and ΦPSII was more pronounced in the mutants as compared to wild-type plants (WT). The preillumination of the leaves with RL caused a significant reduction in the inhibitory effect of UV-radiation on the PSII activity in the WT plants, but it caused only a small decrease in the hy3 mutant. The preillumination of leaves with RL and FRL combination compensated the protective effect of RL on the UV-induced decrease of the fluorescence parameters in the WT. Such reversibility is typical for involvement of red/far-red reversible phytochromes at low intensity light. The results suggest an important role of red/far-red reversible phytochromes (phytochrome B) in the resistance of PSII to UV-A radiation caused by changes in contents of either carotenoids or other UV-absorbing pigments probably through biosynthesis of these pigments. The data also demonstrated that phytochrome B and other phytochromes can affect the PSII stress resistance by the fast regulation of the expression of genes encoding antioxidant enzymes and transcription factors at the step of gene transcription., V. D. Kreslavski, F.-J. Schmitt, C. Keuer, T. Friedrich, G. N. Shirshikova, S. K. Zharmukhamedov, A. A. Kosobryukhov, S. I. Allakhverdiev., and Seznam literatury
Chlorophyll a (Chl a) has an asymmetrical molecular organization, which dictates its orientation and the location of the pigment in the mature photosynthetic apparatus. Although Chl a fluorescence (ChlF) is widely accepted as a proxy for plant photosynthetic performance under countless stress conditions and across species, a mechanistic understanding of this causality is missing. Since water plays a much greater role than solvent for the photosynthetic machinery, elucidating its influence on Chl a may explain the reliable reflection of plant stress response in the ChlF signal. We examine the effect of hydration from well-watered to lethal drought on ChlF imagery results across morphologically diverse species to begin testing the impact of molecular scale hydration of Chl a on ChlF. Our results support a conceptual model where water is an integral part of the photosystems' structure and directly influences Chl a behavior leading to changes in the energy partitioning and ultimately in ChlF., C. R. Guadagno, D. P. Beverly, B. E. Ewers., and Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy
Progressive microwave power saturation (P1/2) measurements have been performed on the tyrosine D radical (YD*) of photosystem II (PSII) in order to examine its relaxation enhancement by the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) poised to the reduced S-1 and S-2 oxidation states by NO treatment. Analysis of the power saturation curves showed that the S-1 oxidation state of the OEC does not enhance the relaxation of YD*: it therefore possesses a diamagnetic ground state. In contrast, the Mn(II)-Mn(III) multiline electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal characteristic of the S-2 oxidation state of the OEC was shown to provide a relaxation enhancement pathway for YD*, however less efficient relative to the one provided by the S2-state multiline EPR signal. We also examined the YD * relaxation enhancement characteristics of the EPR-silent oxidation state produced after brief (1-5 min) dark incubation at 0°C of a PSII sample poised to the EPRactive S-2 state. This EPR-silent oxidation state denoted as "0°C incubation" state was shown to possess remarkably similar P1/2 values with the EPR-active S-2 state in the overall examined temperature range (6-20 K). In addition, these values remained unchanged after successive cycles of the OEC between the EPR-active S-2 state and the "0°C incubation" state. The data presented in this work point to the conclusion that the "0°C incubation" state is indeed an S-2 oxidation state with half-integer spin.
Flagellin (flg22) induces rapid and long-lasting defence responses. It may also affect the photosynthetic activity depending on several internal and external factors, such as the phytohormone ethylene or the day/night time. Based on the results, flg22 treatment, neither in the light phase nor in the evening, caused any significant change in chlorophyll fluorescence induction parameters in the leaves of wild-type and ethylene-receptor mutant Never ripe tomato plants measured the next morning. However, flg22 in the light phase decreased the effective quantum yield and the photochemical quenching both locally and systemically in guard cells. In parallel, the production of reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide increased, which contributed to the stomatal closure and a decrease in CO2 assimilation the next day. A decrease in sugar content and elevated hexokinase activity measured after flg22 exposure can also contribute to local defence responses in intact tomato plants.