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The regulation of photosynthetic electron transport during nutrient deprivation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

Authors :
Wykoff DD
Davies JP
Melis A
Grossman AR
Source :
Plant physiology [Plant Physiol] 1998 May; Vol. 117 (1), pp. 129-39.
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

The light-saturated rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii declined by approximately 75% on a per-cell basis after 4 d of P starvation or 1 d of S starvation. Quantitation of the partial reactions of photosynthetic electron transport demonstrated that the light-saturated rate of photosystem (PS) I activity was unaffected by P or S limitation, whereas light-saturated PSII activity was reduced by more than 50%. This decline in PSII activity correlated with a decline in both the maximal quantum efficiency of PSII and the accumulation of the secondary quinone electron acceptor of PSII nonreducing centers (PSII centers capable of performing a charge separation but unable to reduce the plastoquinone pool). In addition to a decline in the light-saturated rate of O2 evolution, there was reduced efficiency of excitation energy transfer to the reaction centers of PSII (because of dissipation of absorbed light energy as heat and because of a transition to state 2). These findings establish a common suite of alterations in photosynthetic electron transport that results in decreased linear electron flow when C. reinhardtii is limited for either P or S. It was interesting that the decline in the maximum quantum efficiency of PSII and the accumulation of the secondary quinone electron acceptor of PSII nonreducing centers were regulated specifically during S-limited growth by the SacI gene product, which was previously shown to be critical for the acclimation of C. reinhardtii to S limitation (J.P. Davies, F.H. Yildiz, and A.R. Grossman [1996] EMBO J 15: 2150-2159).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0032-0889
Volume :
117
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Plant physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9576782
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.117.1.129