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Do UV‐A radiation and blue light during growth prime leaves to cope with acute high light in photoreceptor mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana?

Authors :
Brelsford, Craig C.
Morales, Luis Orlando
Nezval, Jakub
Kotilainen, Titta K.
Hartikainen, Saara M.
Aphalo, Pedro J.
Robson, Matthew
Brelsford, Craig C.
Morales, Luis Orlando
Nezval, Jakub
Kotilainen, Titta K.
Hartikainen, Saara M.
Aphalo, Pedro J.
Robson, Matthew
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We studied how plants acclimated to growing conditions that included combinations of blue light (BL) and ultraviolet (UV)‐A radiation, and whether their growing environment affected their photosynthetic capacity during and after a brief period of acute high light (as might happen during an under‐canopy sunfleck). Arabidopsis thaliana Landsberg erecta wild‐type were compared with mutants lacking functional blue light and UV photoreceptors: phototropin 1, cryptochromes (CRY1 and CRY2) and UV RESISTANT LOCUS 8 (uvr8). This was achieved using light‐emitting‐diode (LED) lamps in a controlled environment to create treatments with or without BL, in a split‐plot design with or without UV‐A radiation. We compared the accumulation of phenolic compounds under growth conditions and after exposure to 30 min of high light at the end of the experiment (46 days), and likewise measured the operational efficiency of photosystem II (ϕPSII, a proxy for photosynthetic performance) and dark‐adapted maximum quantum yield (Fv/Fm to assess PSII damage). Our results indicate that cryptochromes are the main photoreceptors regulating phenolic compound accumulation in response to BL and UV‐A radiation, and a lack of functional cryptochromes impairs photosynthetic performance under high light. Our findings also reveal a role for UVR8 in accumulating flavonoids in response to a low UV‐A dose. Interestingly, phototropin 1 partially mediated constitutive accumulation of phenolic compounds in the absence of BL. Low‐irradiance BL and UV‐A did not improve ϕPSII and Fv/Fm upon our acute high‐light treatment; however, CRYs played an important role in ameliorating high‐light stress.<br />Funding agencies:Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports Project LO1208 ‘TEWEP’ National Feasibility Programme IEU Structural Funding Operational Programme Research and Development for Innovation Project, CZ.1.05/2.1.00/19.0388

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1233967523
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111.ppl.12749