1. Effects of cell excitation on photosynthetic electron flow and intercellular transport in Chara.
- Author
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Bulychev AA, Eremin A, von Rüling F, and Alova AV
- Subjects
- Electrons, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Photosynthesis, Biological Transport, Chloroplasts metabolism, Chlorophyll metabolism, Electron Transport, Photosystem II Protein Complex metabolism, Light, Fluorescence, Chara
- Abstract
Impact of membrane excitability on fluidic transport of photometabolites and their cell-to-cell passage via plasmodesmata was examined by pulse-modulated chlorophyll (Chl) microfluorometry in Chara australis internodes exposed to dim background light. The cells were subjected to a series of local light (LL) pulses with a 3-min period and a 30-s pulse width, which induced Chl fluorescence transients propagating in the direction of cytoplasmic streaming along the photostimulated and the neighboring internodes. By comparing Chl fluorescence changes induced in the LL-irradiated and the adjoining internodes, the permeability of the nodal complex for the photometabolites was assessed in the resting state and after the action potential (AP) generation. The electrically induced AP had no influence on Chl fluorescence in noncalcified cell regions but disturbed temporarily the metabolite transport along the internode and caused a disproportionally strong inhibition of intercellular metabolite transmission. In chloroplasts located close to calcified zones, Chl fluorescence increased transiently after cell excitation, which indicated the deceleration of photosynthetic electron flow on the acceptor side of photosystem I. Functional distinctions of chloroplasts located in noncalcified and calcified cell areas were also manifested in different modes of LL-induced changes of Chl fluorescence, which were accompanied by dissimilar changes in efficiency of PSII-driven electron flow. We conclude that chloroplasts located near the encrusted areas and in the incrustation-free cell regions are functionally distinct even in the absence of large-scale variations of cell surface pH. The inhibition of transnodal transport after AP generation is probably due to Ca
2+ -regulated changes in plasmodesmal aperture., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Austria, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2023
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