Chilling-induced photoinhibition in nine isolates of Valonia utricularis (Chlorophyta) from different climate regions

A. Eggert*, P. R. van Hasselt, A. Breeman

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    11 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Chilling induced inhibition of photosynthesis was studied in nine isolates of the marine tropical to warm-temperate green macrophyte Valonia utricularis (Roth) C. Agardh. According to their temperature requirements for growth and survival, the isolates belong to a cold-tolerant Atlantic/Mediterranean group and a cold-sensitive Indo-west Pacific group. After 5 hours exposure to 5 degreesC under moderate light, all isolates experienced similar substantial photoinhibition, which approached steady state levels after a decline in Fv/Fm to about 40 % of the initial values. After return to optimal temperature and dim light conditions, Fv/Fm values increased with biphasic kinetics. A fast phase with half-life times of less than 30 minutes (dynamic photoinhibition) was followed by a slow phase lasting a few hours, indicating repair of photodamaged PSII reaction centres (chronic photoinhibition). In the Atlantic/Mediterranean isolates the fast phase accounted for more than 80 % of the recovery response, showing that these isolates were able to cope with the applied low temperature stress by down-regulating their PSII reaction centres. In contrast, the two isolates from the Seychelles were predominantly photodamaged. In a second experiment, three isolates (Corsica, Seychelles, Japan) were exposed to a similar relative amount of cold stress (0, 10, 15degreesC, respectively). The Japanese isolate and the isolate from the Seychelles showed significantly less inhibition compared to 5 degreesC exposure, but no significant difference was found in the Corsican isolate. However, the degree of low temperature stress had no significant influence on the relative contributions of dynamic and chronic photoinhibition. Only two of the seven investigated isolates had a lower final inhibition level when grown at sub-optimal temperatures than at optimal temperatures. However, all sub-optimally grown Atlantic/Mediterranean isolates exhibited faster recovery kinetics from chilling-induced photoinhibition than optimally grown plants. This is related to a faster recovery from chronic photoinhibition than to a higher relative contribution of dynamic photoinhibition. A specific role of the photoprotective pigments of the xanthophyll cycle, leading to an acclimation response in the Atlantic/Mediterranean isolates may be involved. We conclude that ecotypic differentiation in V utricularis is mirrored in different degrees of susceptibility to low temperature stress.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)881-891
    Number of pages11
    JournalJournal of Plant Physiology
    Volume160
    Issue number8
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Aug-2003

    Keywords

    • low temperature sensitivity
    • photoinhibition
    • Valonia utricularis
    • XANTHOPHYLL CYCLE ACTIVITY
    • D1 PROTEIN-TURNOVER
    • HIGH LIGHT STRESS
    • PHOTOSYSTEM-II
    • VIOLAXANTHIN DEEPOXIDATION
    • DEPENDENT PHOTOINHIBITION
    • SUBOPTIMAL TEMPERATURE
    • GROWTH IRRADIANCES
    • DEPTH DISTRIBUTION
    • ULVA-ROTUNDATA

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Chilling-induced photoinhibition in nine isolates of Valonia utricularis (Chlorophyta) from different climate regions'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this