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Epidermal UV-A absorbance and whole-leaf flavonoid composition in pea respond more to solar blue light than to solar UV radiation

Authors :
Siipola, Sari M.
Kotilainen, Titta
Sipari, Nina
Morales Suarez, Luis Orlando
Lindfors, Anders V.
Robson, T. Matthew
Aphalo, Pedro J.
Biosciences
Canopy Spectral Ecology and Ecophysiology
Genetics
Plant Biology
Sensory and Physiological Ecology of Plants (SenPEP)
Viikki Plant Science Centre (ViPS)
Plant stress and natural variation
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Plants synthesize phenolic compounds in response to certain environmental signals or stresses. One large group of phenolics, flavonoids, is considered particularly responsive to ultraviolet (UV) radiation. However, here we demonstrate that solar blue light stimulates flavonoid biosynthesis in the absence of UV-A and UV-B radiation. We grew pea plants (Pisum sativum cv. Meteor) outdoors, in Finland during the summer, under five types of filters differing in their spectral transmittance. These filters were used to (1) attenuate UV-B; (2) attenuate UV-B and UV-A We studied the relative importance of the UV and blue wavebands of sunlight for the phenolics in leaves of pea (Pisum sativum cv. Meteor) plants grown outdoors. We report a large reduction in epidermal flavonoids and a change in the flavonoid composition in leaf extracts when solar blue light was attenuated. Under the conditions of our experiment, these effects of blue light attenuation were much larger than those caused by attenuation of UV radiation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1593..10aa4f649a6097958438133c8aeec065