A closed CO2 and temperature-controlled, long-term chamber system has been developed and set up in a typical boreal forest of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) near the Mekrijärvi Research Station (62°47'N, 30°58'E, 145 m above sea level) belonging to the University of Joensuu, Finland. The main objectives of the experiment were to provide a means of assessing the medium to long-term effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (EC) and temperature (ET) on photosynthesis, respiration, growth, and biomass at the whole-tree level and to measure instantaneous whole-system CO2 exchange. The system consists of 16 chambers with individual facilities for controlling CO2 concentration, temperature, and the combination of the two. The chambers can provide a wide variety of climatic conditions that are similar to natural regimes. In this experiment the target CO2 concentration in the EC chambers was set at a fixed constant of 700 µmol mol-1 and the target air temperature in the ET chambers to track the ambient temperature but with a specified addition. Chamber performance was assessed on the base of recordings covering three consecutive years. The CO2 and temperature control in these closed chambers was in general accurate and reliable. CO2 concentration in the EC chambers was within 600-725 µmol mol-1 for 90 % of the exposure time during the "growing-season" (15 April - 15 September) and 625-725 µmol mol-1 for 88 % of the time in the "off-season" (16 September - 14 April), while temperatures in the chambers were within ±2.0 °C of the ambient or target temperature in the "growing season" and within ±3.0 °C in the "off season". There were still some significant chamber effects. Solar radiation in the chambers was reduced by 50-60 % for 82 % of the time in the "growing season" and 55-65 % for 78 % of the time in the "off season", and the relative humidity of the air was increased by 5-10 % for 72 % of the time in the "growing season" and 2-12 % for 91 % of the time in the "off season". The crown architecture and main phenophase of the trees were not modified significantly by enclosure in the chambers, but some physiological parameters changed significantly, e.g., the radiant energy-saturated photosynthesis rate, transpiration rate, maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem 2, and chlorophyll content. and S. Kellomäki, Kai-Yun Wang, M. Lemettinen.
We compared by chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence imaging the effects of two strains of the same virus (Italian and Spanish strains of the Pepper mild mottle virus - PMMoV-I and-S, respectively) in the host plant Nicotiana benthamiana. The infection was visualized either using conventional Chl fluorescence parameters or by an advanced statistical approach, yielding a combinatorial set of images that enhances the contrast between control and PMMoV-infected plants in the early infection steps. Among the conventional Chl fluorescence parameters, the non-photochemical quenching parameter NPQ was found to be an effective PMMoV infection reporter in asymptomatic leaves of N. benthamiana, detecting an intermediate infection phase. The combinatorial imaging revealed the infection earlier than any of the standard Chl fluorescence parameters, detecting the PMMoV-S infection as soon as 4 d post-inoculation (dpi), and PMMoV-I infection at 6 dpi; the delay correlates with the lower virulence of the last viral strain. and M. Pineda ... [et al.].
The xanthophyll cycle and the water-water cycle had different functional significance in chilling-sensitive sweet pepper upon exposure to chilling temperature (4 °C) under low irradiance (100 µmol m-2 s-1) for 6 h. During chilling stress, effects of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) on photosystem 2 (PS2) in dithiothreitol (DTT) fed leaves remained distinguishable from that of the water-water cycle in diethyldithiocarbamate (DDTC) fed leaves. In DTT-fed leaves, NPQ decreased greatly accompanied by visible inhibition of the de-epoxidized ratio of the xanthophyll cycle, and maximum photochemical efficiency of PS2 (Fv/Fm) decreased markedly. Thus the xanthophyll cycle-dependent NPQ could protect PS2 through energy dissipation under chilling stress. However, NPQ had a slighter effect on photosystem 1 (PS1) in DTT-fed leaves than in DDTC-fed leaves, whereas effects of the water-water cycle on PS1 remained distinguishable from that of NPQ. Inhibiting superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity increased the accumulation of O2, the oxidation level of P700 (P700+) decreased markedly relative to the control and DTT-fed leaves. Both Fv/Fm and NPQ changed little in DDTC-fed leaves accompanied by little change of (A+Z)/(V+A+Z). This is the active oxygen species inducing PS1 photoinhibition in sweet pepper. The water-water cycle can be interrupted easily at chilling temperature. We propose that during chilling stress under low irradiance, the xanthophyll cycle-dependent NPQ has the main function to protect PS2, whereas the water-water cycle is not only the pathway to dissipate energy but also the dominant factor causing PS1 chilling-sensitivity in sweet pepper. and X.-G. Li ... [et al.].
As a stress factor, salt induces the phosphorylation of light-harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b proteins (LHCII) in Dunaliella salina. In this study, we found that the salt-induced phosphorylation of LHCII was not affected by phosphatase, and that salt simultaneously regulated both the phosphorylation of LHCII and the expression of genes encoding light-harvesting Chl a/b proteins of photosystem II (lhcb) and the gene encoding Chl a oxygenase (cao) in dark-adapted D. salina. The mRNA accumulation patterns of lhcb and cao were similar, which further affected the size of LHCII and the ratio of Chl a to Chl b. Therefore, we inferred this simultaneous regulation is one of the mechanisms of D. salina to adapt to the high-salinity environment. and W. M. Chen ... [et al.].
Drought stress causes changes in vein and stomatal density. The objectives of this study were to determine (1) if the changes in vein and stomatal density are coordinated in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) and (2) how these changes affect water-use efficiency (WUE). The results showed significant positive correlations between vein density and stomatal density when cotton was grown under different degrees of drought stress. WUE was significantly positively correlated with the densities of both veins and stomata. Stomatal pore area and stomatal density on the abaxial leaf side, but not the adaxial side, were significantly correlated with WUE, stomatal conductance, leaf net photosynthetic rate, and transpiration rate. In conclusion, coordinated changes in vein and stomatal density improve the WUE of cotton under drought stress. The abaxial leaf side plays a more important role than the adaxial side in WUE and gas exchange., Z. Y. Lei, J. M. Han, X. P. Yi, W. F. Zhang, Y. L. Zhang., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Some steps in the isolation method of photosystem 2 (PS2)-enriched partícles (BBY) influenced the Cu content of the finál preparation. In particular, the centrifugation at 10 000 X g ušed to remove starch after Triton X-100 treatment of the thylakoids, yielded starch-free BBY with a low copper content. This contrasted with the high Cu content of the starch-containing BBY. Differences in Cu levels of both preparations seemed thus to be related to the starch content of the sample. Four imidentifíed proteins were found in the starch fraction. They are probably new copper binding sites in the photosynthetic cell.
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) plants were grown over a 30-d period in nutricnt soiution containing concentrations of Cu varying from 0.002 to 6.25 g iit^, and ihen oxygen toxicity was investigated in the chloroplasts. The Cu concentration in the shoots increased with increasing levels of this metal in the nutrient soiution, whereas the Fe concentration decreased after the 0.05 g m'^ Cu treatment and the Zn concentration did not show any clear tiend. Catalase, glutathione reductase and Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase activities decreased with increasing Cu levels. On a fresh mass basis, ethylene production decreased after the 0.05 g Cu treatment, whereas, on a chlorophyll (Chl) basis, it increased until the 1.25 g m‘^ Cu iTeatment. The chloroplast lipid peroxidation increased (on a Chl and lipid basis) between the 0.01 and the 1.25 g m"^ Cu treatment. On a fresh mass basis the concentration of chloroplastic digalactosyldiacylglycerol, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, phospha- tidylcholine, phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylinositol decreased, whereas, on a Chl basis, the concentration of the first two lipids sharply decreased after the 0.01 gm‘3 Cu treatment. Additionally, only a slight decrease was foiind in the concentration of phosphatidylglycerol with increasing Cu concentrations. Measurements of the linolenate hydroperoxide concentration in these acyl lipids showed an increase after the 0.01 g m'^ Cu treatment for the fnst two lipids as weil as an increase with increasing Cu levels for phosphatidylglycerol.
We analyzed several approaches dealing with the components of non-photochemical energy dissipation and introduced improved versions of the equations used to calculate this parameter. The usage of these formulae depends on the conditions of the sample (acclimation to dark or irradiation, presence or absence of the "actinic light"). The parameter known as "excess" cannot be used as a component of energy partitioning. In reality, this parameter reflects the differences between potential and actual quantum yields of photochemistry. and D. Kornyeyev, A. S. Holaday.
We compared photoinhibition sensitivity to high irradiance (HI) in wild-type barley (wt) and both its chlorina f104-nuclear gene mutant, that restricts chlorophyll (Chl) a and Chl b synthesis, and its f2-nuclear gene mutant, that inhibits all Chl b synthesis. Both Fv/Fm and ΦPS2 decreased more significantly in f2 than f104 and wt with duration of HI exposure. Chl degraded more rapidly in the f2 than in either f104 or wt. Most sensitivity to photoinhibition was exhibited for f2, whereas there was little difference in response to HI between the f104 and wt. The highest de-epoxidation (DES) value at every time point of exposure to HI was measured for f2, whereas the wt had the lowest value among the three strains. There were two lifetime components resolved for the conversion of violaxanthin (V) to zeaxanthin plus antheraxanthin (Z + A). The most rapid lifetime was around 6 min and the slower lifetime was >140 min, in both the mutants and wt. However, the wt and f104 both displayed larger amplitudes of both de-epoxidation lifetimes than f2. The difference between the final de-epoxidation state (DES = [Z + A]/[V + A + Z]) in the light compared to the dark expressed as ΔDES for wt, f104, and f2 was 0.630, 0.623, and 0.420, respectively. The slow lifetime component and overall larger ΔDES in the wt and f104 correlated with more photoprotection, as indicated by relatively higher Fv/Fm and ΦPS2, compared to the f2. Hence the photoprotection against photoinhibition has no relationship with the absolute DES value, but there is a strong relationship with de-epoxidation rate and relative extent or ΔDES. and Chang-Lian Peng ... [et al.].
Morphoiinoethylesters of 2-, 3- and 4-alkoxysubstituted phenylcarbamic acids (MAPC) inhibit photosynthetic processes in algae and plant chloroplasts. The inhibitoiy activity of MAPC in photosynthesizing organisms was in good correlations with lipophilicity characteristics such as hydrophobic fragment constants, partition coefficients and chromatographic retention factors.