Resilience of Xanthoria parietina under Mars-like conditions: photosynthesis and oxidative stress response.
Christian LorenzCarmen ArenaErmenegilda VitaleElisabetta BianchiGiovanni PoggialiGiulia AlemannoRenato BenesperiJohn Robert BrucatoStephen GarlandJörn HelbertStefano LoppiAndreas LorekAlessandro MaturilliAlessio PapiniJean-Pierre de VeraMickaël BaquéPublished in: Planta (2023)
immediately after the exposure indicated a reduction of photosynthesis. After 24 h from exposure, photosynthetic efficiency began to recover suggesting the occurrence of protective mechanisms. Antioxidant concentrations were higher during the exposure, only decreasing after 30 days. The recovery of photosynthetic efficiency in both treatments suggested a strong resilience by the photosynthetic apparatus against combined space stress factors, likely due to the boosted antioxidants at the beginning and their depletion at the end of the exposure. The overall results indicated that the production of antioxidants, along with the occurrence of photoprotection mechanisms, guarantee X. parietina survivability in Mars-like environment.