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High Light Acclimation Mechanisms Deficient in a PsbS-Knockout Arabidopsis Mutant.

Young Nam YangThi Thuy Linh LeJi-Hye HwangIsmayil S ZulfugarovEun-Ha KimAnd Hyun Uk KimJong-Seong JeonDong-Hee LeeChoon-Hwan Lee
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
The photosystem II PsbS protein of thylakoid membranes is responsible for regulating the energy-dependent, non-photochemical quenching of excess chlorophyll excited states as a short-term mechanism for protection against high light (HL) stress. However, the role of PsbS protein in long-term HL acclimation processes remains poorly understood. Here we investigate the role of PsbS protein during long-term HL acclimation processes in wild-type (WT) and npq4-1 mutants of Arabidopsis which lack the PsbS protein. During long-term HL illumination, photosystem II photochemical efficiency initially dropped, followed by a recovery of electron transport and photochemical quenching (qL) in WT, but not in npq4-1 mutants. In addition, we observed a reduction in light-harvesting antenna size during HL treatment that ceased after HL treatment in WT, but not in npq4-1 mutants. When plants were adapted to HL, more reactive oxygen species (ROS) were accumulated in npq4-1 mutants compared to WT. Gene expression studies indicated that npq4-1 mutants failed to express genes involved in plastoquinone biosynthesis. These results suggest that the PsbS protein regulates recovery processes such as electron transport and qL during long-term HL acclimation by maintaining plastoquinone biosynthetic gene expression and enhancing ROS homeostasis.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • gene expression
  • energy transfer
  • reactive oxygen species
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • dna methylation
  • amino acid
  • transcription factor
  • dna damage
  • cell death
  • electron transfer
  • case control