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Chloroplast acclimation in leaves of Guzmania monostachia in response to high light

Version 2 2024-06-03, 00:30
Version 1 2023-11-02, 04:57
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 00:30 authored by K Maxwell, JL Marrison, RM Leech, H Griffiths, P Horton
Abstract Acclimation of leaves to high light (HL; 650 μmol m−2 s−1) was investigated in the long-lived epiphytic bromeliad Guzmania monostachiaand compared with plants maintained under low light (LL; 50 μmol m−2 s−1). Despite a 60% decrease in total chlorophyll in HL-grown plants, the chlorophyll a/bratio remained stable. Additionally, chloroplasts from HL-grown plants had a much lower thylakoid content and reduced granal stacking. Immunofluorescent labeling techniques were used to quantify the level of photosynthetic polypeptides. HL-grown plants had 30% to 40% of the content observed in LL-grown plants for the light-harvesting complex associated with photosystems I and II, the 33-kD photosystem II polypeptide, and Rubisco. These results were verified using conventional biochemical techniques, which revealed a comparable 60% decrease in Rubisco and total soluble protein. When expressed on a chlorophyll basis, the amount of protein and Rubisco was constant for HL- and LL-grown plants. Acclimation to HL involves a tightly coordinated adjustment of photosynthesis, indicating a highly regulated decrease in the number of photosynthetic units manifested at the level of the content of light-harvesting and electron transport components, the amount of Rubisco, and the induction of Crassulacean acid metabolism. This response occurs in mature leaves and may represent a strategy that is optimal for the resource-limited epiphytic niche.

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Location

United States

Language

English

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY

Volume

121

Pagination

89-95

ISSN

0032-0889

eISSN

1532-2548

Issue

1

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS