First published online May 16, 2002; 10.1104/pp.004341
Plant Physiol, June 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 876-885
Photoinhibition in Mutants of Arabidopsis Deficient in Thylakoid
Unsaturation1
Perumal
Vijayan2 and
John
Browse*
Institute of Biological Chemistry, Washington State University,
Pullman, Washington 99164-6340
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ABSTRACT |
Thylakoid lipid composition in higher plants is characterized by a
high level of fatty acid unsaturation. We have screened four mutants of
Arabidopsis that have reduced levels of fatty acid unsaturation. Three
of the mutant lines tested, fad5,
fad6, and the fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 triple
mutant, were more susceptible to photoinhibition than wild-type
Arabidopsis, whereas one mutant, fab1, was
indistinguishable from wild type. The fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8
triple mutant, which contains no trienoic fatty acids in its thylakoid
membranes, was most susceptible to photoinhibition. Detailed
investigation of photoinhibition in the triple mutant revealed that the
rate of photoinactivation of PSII was the same in wild-type and mutant
plants. However, the recovery of photoinactivated PSII was slower in
fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8, relative to wild type, at all
temperatures below 27°C. These results indicate that trienoic fatty
acids of thylakoid membrane lipids are required for low-temperature recovery from photoinhibition in Arabidopsis.
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INTRODUCTION |
The chloroplast thylakoid membranes
that are host to the light harvesting and electron transport reactions
of photosynthesis have a characteristic and unusual lipid composition.
The highly unsaturated fatty acids 18:3 and 16:3 account for
approximately two-thirds of all the fatty acids in thylakoids and more
than 90% of the fatty acids in monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, the most abundant chloroplast lipid. The atypical fatty acid,
3-trans-hexadecenoate (16:1, 3-trans), is present as a component
of the major thylakoid phospholipid, phosphatidylglycerol (PG). Because
these and other characteristics of chloroplast lipids are common to
most or all higher plants, researchers have developed a series of
hypotheses that propose that particular lipid structures have important
roles in ensuring proper photosynthetic function (Siegenthaler and
Murata, 1998 ).
Several lines of evidence indicate that thylakoid fatty-acid
composition influences photoinhibition. Under most conditions, the
major mechanism of photoinhibition is inactivation of the D1 protein of
photosystem II (PSII; Aro et al., 1993 ). Damage to D1 is directly
proportional to light intensity (Tyystjärvi and Aro, 1996 ), and
inactivated protein molecules must be replaced by newly synthesized D1
to restore PSII activity (Kanervo et al., 1997 ; Kettunen et al., 1997 ;
van Wijk et al., 1997 ; Zhang et al., 1999 , 2000 ). The actual extent of
photoinhibition in vivo depends on the balance between inactivation of
D1 and the recovery process, which involves insertion of new D1
molecules into the thylakoid and their incorporation into the PSII
complex (van Wijk et al., 1997 ). Recovery from photoinhibition is
strongly temperature dependent (Greer et al., 1991 ; Wunschmann and
Brand, 1992 ; Gombos et al., 1994 ), and photoinhibitory damage has been
implicated as a major cause of chilling sensitivity in plants (Moon et
al., 1995 ). Thylakoid fatty acid composition has been shown to
influence photoinhibition in two specific ways. In cyanobacteria, the
overall level of thylakoid unsaturation has been directly related
to the capacity for D1 replacement and to the rate of recovery from
photoinhibition at low temperatures (18°C-22°C; Gombos et al.,
1992 , 1994 ; Kanervo et al., 1995 ). In these studies, double mutants of
Synechocystis sp. PCC6803,
Fad6/DesA::Kmr and
DesA /DesD , which
lack all polyunsaturated fatty acids, were susceptible to
photoinhibitory damage. However, the Fad6 mutant, which is substantially deficient in trienoic fatty acids but contains dienoic fatty acids, was indistinguishable from wild type (Gombos et al., 1992 ;
Tasaka et al., 1996 ). Complementary to these results is the observation
that the expression of the 12 desaturase encoded by DesA
in a cyanobacterium that normally does not synthesize polyunsaturated
fatty acids, Synechococcus sp. PCC7942, increased the
low-temperature tolerance of PSII in this organism (Sippola et al.,
1998 ).
In higher plants, the extent of low-temperature photoinhibition
has been correlated with the level of saturated fatty acids (16:0 and
18:0) plus 16:1, 3-trans in PG (Moon et al., 1995 ). Wild-type
tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants contain 67% of these fatty acids in leaf PG, but in a transgenic line expressing a squash
(Cucurbita pepo) acyl-ACP:glycerol-3-P acyltransferase (Rbcs-SQ), the proportion was increased to 88% (Moon et al., 1995 ). Photoinhibition in Rbcs-SQ plants was significantly higher than in
wild-type controls. Additional experiments demonstrated that the
recovery process (rather than D1 damage) was affected in Rbcs-SQ plants
at 17°C and 25°C. As discussed by Moon et al. (1995) , the significance of these results lies in the fact that the level of 16:0 + 18:0 + 16:1, 3-trans (sometimes referred to as high-melting-point fatty acids) is also correlated with chilling sensitivity in plants (Murata, 1983 ; Roughan, 1985 ). The implication is that delayed recovery
from photoinhibition may be directly linked to the fatty acid
composition of the chloroplast PG (Somerville, 1995 ).
The series of lipid mutants available in Arabidopsis have provided
important information about the relationship between lipid structure
and membrane function (Browse et al., 1985 ; Miquel et al., 1993 ; Wu et
al., 1994 ; McConn and Browse, 1998 ). Here, we have used these mutants
to investigate the effects of altered thylakoid fatty acid composition
on damage and recovery processes during photoinhibition.
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RESULTS |
Initial Studies of Photoinhibition
The four mutant lines we selected for study all exhibit reductions
in thylakoid membrane unsaturation compared with wild-type Arabidopsis.
The fab1 (Wu et al., 1994 ) and fad5 (=
fadB; Kunst et al., 1989 ) mutants show similar increases in
16:0 at the expense of polyunsaturated fatty acids. In the
fad6 mutant (= fadC; Browse et al.,
1989 ) trienoic fatty acids are reduced by 43% and replaced by 16:1 and
18:1. In the triple mutant fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 (McConn and
Browse, 1996 ), trienoic acids are completely eliminated and replaced by
16:2 and 18:2. We monitored potential quantum yield of PSII,
Fv/Fm, in
intact leaves of these plants using noninvasive chlorophyll
fluorescence techniques. In Arabidopsis and other plants,
Fv/Fm values
have been shown to be well correlated with other measures of
photoinhibition (Russell et al., 1995 ).
For plants grown at 22°C under 120 µmol quanta
m 2 s 1 continuous
illumination, there was no detectable difference in
Fv/Fm between the mutants and wild-type controls (McConn and Browse, 1996 ; Wu et al.,
1997 ). After leaves had been exposed to 1,200 µmol quanta m 2 s 1 of white light at
22°C for 2 h,
Fv/Fm in
wild-type leaves was reduced by 45%. When exposure to high light
occurred at 17°C, Fv/Fm declined
by 58% (Fig. 1). Photoinhibition of
leaves from fab1 plants resulted in reductions in
Fv/Fm that were
the same as wild type. However, the other three mutants all experienced significantly greater photoinhibition than wild type and
fab1 at both 22°C and 17°C. For example, at 17°C
fad5 is photoinhibited 22% more than wild type and the
triple mutant, fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 shows a 26% greater
photoinhibition relative to wild type (Fig. 1).

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Figure 1.
Photoinhibition of PSII in excised leaves of
wild-type and mutant Arabidopsis. Data are presented as the percent
decrease in
Fv/Fm
after 2 h of photoinhibitory treatment under 1,200 µmol
m 2 s 1 white light at
22°C (gray bars) and 17°C (black bars). The initial
Fv/Fm
ratios in wild-type and mutant samples varied from 0.80 to 0.81. Data
are mean ± SE; n = 10.
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Photoinhibition and Recovery in fab1 Plants
The fab1 mutant contains increased 16:0 in PG and, as a
result, the proportion of high-melting-point fatty acids (16:0 + 18:0 + 16:1, 3-trans) is 69% in this lipid compared with only 55% in PG
from wild type. Levels of high-melting-point fatty acids above 60% in
PG have been correlated with chilling sensitivity in plants and, as
described above, with decreased rates of recovery from photoinhibition
(Moon et al., 1995 ; Nishida and Murata, 1996 ). For this reason, we
carried out further experiments to compare photoinhibitory damage and
recovery between fab1 and wild-type plants.
In Arabidopsis and other plants, the D1 recovery process is blocked
during short-term experiments in which plants grown at 18°C to 25°C
are exposed to high light at temperatures below 5°C (Aro et al.,
1994 ; Russell et al., 1995 ). By contrast, damage to D1 and the
resulting photoinactivation of PSII is substantially independent of
temperature (Tyystjärvi and Aro, 1996 ). When leaves from
fab1 and wild-type plants were exposed to 1,200 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1 at 2°C,
Fv/Fm declined
at the same rate in both sets of samples. After 3 h of exposure,
Fv/Fm had
fallen to 35% of the starting value (Fig.
2). These results indicate that the rate
of photodamage to the D1 protein in fab1 was
indistinguishable from the rate in wild type under these
conditions.

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Figure 2.
Effect of 3 h of photoinhibition (PI) at
2°C (to) followed by 4 h of recovery at
different temperatures on
Fv/Fm
activity in the leaves of wild-type Arabidopsis (black bars) and
fab1 (gray bars) plants. Photoinhibition was carried out
under 1,200 µmol quanta m 2
s 1 of white light; recovery was under 70 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1. Values
are averages of 15 leaves from three different experiments. The average
initial value of
Fv/Fm in
wild-type and mutant plants varied between 0.82 and 0.83.
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We then carried out a series of experiments in which photoinhibited
leaves were allowed to recover under low light at different temperatures. At the four temperatures tested, 7°C, 17°C, 22°C, and 27°C, the kinetics of recovery were indistinguishable between fab1 and wild-type samples. The results are summarized
in Figure 2 by showing the extent of recovery after 4 h at each
temperature. The slightly better performance shown by fab1
is not statistically significant. Taken together, our results indicate
that the increased proportion of high-melting-point PG
found in fab1 plants (Wu and Browse, 1995 ) does not
increase the susceptibility of this mutant to photoinhibition.
Kinetics of Photoinhibition in the Triple Mutant, fad3-2
fad7-2 fad8
The fad5, fad6, and fad3-2 fad7-2
fad8 mutants all showed increased photoinhibition relative to wild
type in our preliminary assessment (Fig. 1). Subsequent experiments
confirmed this finding and also revealed that the fad3-2 fad7-2
fad8 triple mutant consistently exhibited the most severe
photoinhibition phenotype of the three lines. For this reason, we will
report here the results of comparisons between the triple mutant and
wild type. Previous studies have established that under light
intensities that are normally used for growth of Arabidopsis (120-150
µmol quanta m 2 s 1),
the triple mutant is indistinguishable from wild type in photosynthesis and growth at 22°C and shows only small differences (approximately 10%) during short-term experiments at temperatures as low as 5°C (McConn and Browse, 1996 ; Routaboul et al., 2000 ).
We first of all compared the time-course of decline in
Fv/Fm for
wild-type and mutant leaves exposed to 1,600 µmol quanta m 2 s 1 of white light
(Fig. 3). At 27°C, the wild type and
mutant both exhibited a decline in
Fv/Fm during
the 1st h of exposure followed by stabilization at approximately 70%
of the starting value. At 22°C, a more extensive initial decline
occurred, but whereas
Fv/Fm in the
wild type stabilized at 50% of the starting value, the mutant
continued a slow decline to reach 40% after 6 h of high-light treatment. At 17°C, separation of the
Fv/Fm curves
for wild type and mutant occurred earlier in the experiment, and after
6 h of exposure,
Fv/Fm in
fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 leaves averaged only 18% of the
to value compared with 40% in the wild type.

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Figure 3.
Photoinhibition under 1,600 µmol quanta
m 2 s 1 of white light in
excised leaves of wild type ( ) and fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8
mutant plants ( ) at 27°C (A), 22°C (B), and 17°C (C). Data are
averages of 15 leaves from three independent experiments. Vertical bars
represent SE of measurement. Initial values for
wild-type and mutant leaves were 0.80 and 0.82, respectively.
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Photoinhibition in the Absence of D1 Repair
When leaves were photoinhibited at 3°C, the decline in
Fv/Fm followed
the same time course in both the mutant and wild type (Fig.
4A), and this is consistent with the
conclusion that removal and replacement of damaged D1 does not occur at
low temperature. To confirm this interpretation, we repeated the
photoinhibition experiment at 17°C but included wild-type and mutant
leaves that had been treated with lincomycin to inhibit chloroplast
protein synthesis (Tyystjärvi and Aro, 1996 ). Compared with
untreated leaves, lincomycin allowed more extensive photoinhibition of
PSII and very largely eliminated the differential between wild-type and
mutant responses at this temperature (Fig. 4B). The accelerated rate of
Fv/Fm decline
in lincomycin-treated leaves at 17°C was almost identical to that
observed in untreated leaves at 3°C, and these data reflect the
kinetics of PSII damage in the absence of D1 synthesis and reassembly
of functional PSII complexes.

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Figure 4.
Photoinactivation of PSII under 1,600 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1 in leaves
from wild-type (solid symbols) and fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 mutant
(open symbols) plants at 3°C (A) and at 17°C (B) either untreated
( and ) or after treatment with 1 mM
lincomycin ( and ). Data are averages of 15 leaves from three
independent experiments expressed as a percentage of initial
Fv/Fm.
Vertical bars represent SE of measurement.
Initial values for wild-type and mutant leaves were 0.80 and 0.82, respectively.
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Photoinhibition in Isolated Thylakoids
Photoinactivation of PSII occurs much more rapidly in isolated
thylakoid preparations than in intact leaves (e.g. Moon et al., 1995 )
even under conditions where the thylakoids maintain activity after long
periods in the dark or in low light. To uncover any differences between
the fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 mutant and wild type in this more
rapid in vitro assay, we incubated thylakoids prepared from plants of
each line either under 2,000 µmol quanta m 2
s 1 of white light or in darkness and then
assayed for PSII activity. In the light, PSII activity declined rapidly
in thylakoids from both wild type and mutant (Fig.
5). Thylakoids maintained in darkness before assay retained high rates of PSII electron transport throughout the experiment (Fig. 5) and for several hours afterward (not
shown).

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Figure 5.
Photoinactivation of PSII activity in thylakoids
isolated from wild-type ( ) and fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 mutant
( ) plants by 2,000 µmol quanta m 2
s 1 white light at 22°C. PSII activity was
measured as the rate of DCPIP-dependent oxygen evolution at saturating
light intensity in thylakoids that were previously photoinhibited in
the absence of the electron donor. The PSII activity of control samples
of wild-type ( ) and mutant ( ) thylakoids, which were incubated in
darkness, are also shown. The initial rate of DCPIP-dependent oxygen
evolution was 253 and 260 µmol O2
h 1 mg 1 chlorophyll in
wild-type and mutant, respectively. Data are averages of three
independent measurements. Vertical bars represent
SE.
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Measuring Recovery from Photoinhibition
The results reported above are consistent with a model in
which a relatively constant and temperature-insensitive rate of photoinactivation of D1 competes with a highly temperature-dependent process of D1 replacement. To measure the rate of recovery, we incubated wild-type and mutant leaves under 1,600 µmol quanta m 2 s 1 at 3°C for
3 h so that
Fv/Fm was
reduced to only 20% of the value measured in untreated controls and
then followed recovery of
Fv/Fm at
different temperatures under low light of 70 µmol
m 2 s 1. Recovery from
photoinhibition does not occur in darkness, but the process is maximal
at all temperatures under as little as 20 µmol quanta
m 2 s 1 (Aro et al.,
1994 ).
At both 7°C and 12°C, recovery of
Fv/Fm is
negligible in fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 plants, but recovery is
also extremely slow in wild-type plants (Fig.
6, A and B). A much larger difference in recovery rates is seen at 17°C (Fig. 6C). At this temperature, Fv/Fm measured
in wild-type leaves increased steadily with time, so that by the end of
the experiment at 8 h (data not shown)
Fv/Fm was 70%
of the pretreatment value. In mutant leaves,
Fv/Fm rose much
more slowly than in wild type. After 8 h
Fv/Fm in the
mutant was still less than 40% of the pretreatment value (data not
shown). At 22°C, the rates of recovery were higher in both wild-type
and mutant leaves, but a large difference remained between the two lines (Fig. 6D). However, at 27°C, the rate of recovery in mutant plants was substantially the same as that in wild type (Fig. 6E). These
results allow the construction of temperature-response curves for the
recovery process in the mutant and wild type, and these are shown in
Figure 6F.

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Figure 6.
Temperature dependence of recovery from
photoinhibition. Leaves of wild-type ( ) and fad3-2 fad7-2
fad8 mutant ( ) plants were photoinactivated for 3 h at
3°C and 1,600 µmol quanta m 2
h 1 before being incubated under 70 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1 white
light at 7°C (A), 12°C (B), 17°C (C), 22°C (D), or 27°C (E).
The initial rates of recovery, calculated from each graph (see
"Materials and Methods"), are plotted in F. Data are averages of 10 samples; vertical bars represent SE. The initial
Fv/Fm values
averaged 0.80 in wild type and 0.81 for the mutant.
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DISCUSSION |
In most higher plants, PG of the chloroplasts contains an
unsaturated 18-carbon fatty acid at the sn-1 position and
16:0 or 16:1, 3-trans at the sn-2 position. In contrast,
many chilling-sensitive plants accumulate PG in which both the
sn-1 and sn-2 positions contain a saturated fatty
acid (16:0 or 18:0) or 16:1, 3trans (Murata et al., 1982 ; Roughan,
1985 ). As a result, the PG molecular species undergo a transition from
liquid-crystalline to gel phase at temperatures well above 25°C
(Murata and Yamaya, 1984 ). One hypothesis proposes that the presence of
these "high-melting-point" PG results in the formation of gel phase
domains at chilling temperatures (5°C-10°C) and that lateral phase
separation within chloroplast membranes is the direct cause of chilling
sensitivity (Murata et al., 1992 ; Nishida and Murata, 1996 ). Typically,
plants containing more than 60% high-melting-point fatty acids in PG
have been shown to be chilling sensitive (Murata et al., 1982 ; Roughan,
1985 ), and experiments with transgenic plants also support this
hypothesis (Murata, 1983 ; Wolter et al., 1992 ). However, the
Arabidopsis fab1 mutant contains 69% high-melting-point
fatty acids in PG a higher percentage than is found in many chilling
sensitive plants but does not show the symptoms of classic chilling
sensitivity (Wu and Browse, 1995 ). Instead, fab1 plants are
damaged only by long-term exposure to low temperature. During the first
7 to 10 d after transfer to 2°C, growth and photosynthetic
characteristics of fab1 plants remained indistinguishable
from wild type, but beyond this time
Fv/Fm values
for mutant plants declined rapidly and reached values less than 0.1 after 28 d at 2°C. Electron microscopic examination of leaf
samples revealed rapid and extensive disruption of thylakoid and
chloroplast structure in the mutant. These results were interpreted as
a primary disruption of PSII center function that triggers an
autophagic response (Wu et al., 1997 ). Despite the almost complete loss
of photosynthetic function and the destruction of photosynthetic
machinery, fab1 plants retained a substantial capacity for
recovery after transfer to 22°C (Wu et al., 1997 ).
Moon et al. (1995) used transgenic tobacco plants expressing a squash
acyl-ACP:glycerol-3-P acyltransferase (line Rbcs-SQ) to provide a
correlation between increased high-melting-point PG and a reduced rate
of recovery from photoinhibition at 17°C and 25°C. The possibility
that reduced recovery from photoinhibition contributes to plant
chilling sensitivity has been debated (Moon et al., 1995 ; Somerville,
1995 ). However, transgenic Arabidopsis plants with increased
high-melting-point PG (through expression of the Escherichia coli
plsB gene; Wolter et al., 1992 ) were not compromised in their
ability to recover from photoinhibition at 22°C (Bruggemann and
Wolter, 1995 ). In agreement with the result of Bruggemann and Wolter
(1995) , we found no detectable difference between fab1
plants and wild-type Arabidopsis in the extent or kinetics of
photoinhibition or in the speed of recovery from photoinhibition at any
temperature between 7°C and 27°C. Nevertheless, our results do not
contradict those of Moon et al., because the Rbcs-SQ line of tobacco
contains very high levels of high-melting-point fatty acids in PG 88%
of total PG compared with 69% in fab1 plants. Instead, they
suggest that a threshold level of high-melting-point fatty acids in PG
may be required before recovery from photoinhibition is compromised.
Like fab1, the fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 triple mutant
also becomes chlorotic during growth at low temperatures, but it
exhibits much less severe reductions in
Fv/Fm than
fab1 (Wu et al., 1997 ; Routaboul et al., 2000 ).
Nevertheless, our experiments demonstrate that it is the triple mutant,
not fab1, that displays a photoinhibition phenotype. Our
data are consistent with a model in which photodamage to the D1 protein
occurs at the same rate in the fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8 mutant and
wild type, whereas replacement of damaged D1 and recovery from
photoinhibition is compromised in the mutant at all temperatures below
27°C (Fig. 6). This model is in general agreement with the
conclusion, reached from studies of cyanobacteria, that reduced levels
of thylakoid unsaturation prevent the efficient turnover of D1 protein
in photodamaged PSII centers (Gombos et al., 1992 , 1994 ; Kanervo et
al., 1995 , 1997 ). However, there are important differences between
cyanobacteria and Arabidopsis in the relationship between fatty acid
composition and the rate of recovery from photoinhibition. In the
cyanobacterial model Synechocystis sp. PCC6803, mutations
that substantially eliminate trienoic fatty acids were shown to have
little or no effect on photoinhibition processes (Gombos et al., 1992 ),
and it was necessary to generate mutants deficient in all
polyunsaturated fatty acids Fad6/DesA::Kmr and
DesA /DesD
to observe reduced rates of recovery from photoinhibition (Gombos et
al., 1994 ; Tasaka et al., 1996 ) and decreased levels of D1 protein at
high-light intensities (Kanervo et al., 1995 ). Despite these
photoinhibition phenotypes, the Synechocystis sp. mutants are healthy and viable at normal growth temperatures and moderate light
levels. In contrast, a mutant of Arabidopsis lacking polyunsaturated fatty acids, fad2 fad6, is incapable of autotrophic growth
and can only be grown on Suc-supplemented media (McConn and Browse, 1998 ). Because fad2 fad6 plants are robust but severely
chlorotic when grown on Suc under low light (80-100 µmol quanta
m 2 s 1), we concluded
that photosynthesis is the process most severely affected by the
elimination of polyunsaturated fatty acids (McConn and Browse, 1998 ).
fad2 fad6 plants rapidly photobleached when exposed to light
intensities as low as 150 µmol quanta m 2
s 1 (approximately one-tenth the levels used to
induce photoinhibition in the experiments reported here).
In contrast to the fad2 fad6 mutant, the fad3-2 fad7-2
fad8 mutant is largely indistinguishable from wild type in growth
and photosynthesis when grown at 22°C and light intensities as high as 250 µmol quanta m 2
s 1 (McConn and Browse, 1996 ; Routaboul et al.,
2000 ). Instead, effects on photosynthesis are seen in the triple mutant
only in environments that are toward the extremes of the physiological
range. We have previously characterized the decline in photosynthetic
function of triple mutant plants that occurs during growth at 4°C
(Routaboul et al., 2000 ). Similar but less extreme phenotypes have been
described for the fad5 and fad6 mutants (Hugly
and Somerville, 1992 ). Now these same three lines are shown to suffer
increased photoinhibition (Fig. 1). In fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8
and probably in fad5 and fad6 also, it is the
recovery process that is compromised throughout most of the
physiological temperature range for this species (Fig. 6), suggesting
that lowered thylakoid unsaturation reduces the rate at which damaged
D1 protein can be replaced in the PSII complex.
Over the last 15 years, many studies have demonstrated that photodamage
to the D1 protein is a major cause of photoinhibition and that recovery
requires replacement of the damaged D1 with a newly synthesized D1
molecule. The D1 protein is known to be synthesized on thylakoid-bound
ribosomes as a precursor with a 9- to 16-amino acid C-terminal
extension. After insertion into the thylakoid, the precursor is
processed to its final form by a lumenal protease. PSII is not
reactivated until this processing step has occurred (Kanervo et
al., 1997 ; Zhang et al., 1999 , 2000 ). In the mutants of
Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 that lack all polyunsaturated fatty acids (Fad6/DesA::Kmr
and
DesA /DesD ),
the reduced recovery from photoinhibition (Gombos et al., 1994 ) has been shown to involve a failure to process newly synthesized D1
precursor, which accumulated to considerable levels in mutant but not
wild-type cells at low temperatures (Kanervo et al., 1997 ). In that
study, precursor D1 integrated into PSII complexes even at low
temperatures, but no activation of photosynthetic
O2 evolution occurred. Because the processes of
D1 synthesis, assembly into PSII complexes, and protease processing of
the C terminus are similar in cyanobacteria and higher plants (Zhang et
al., 1999 ), it is tempting to speculate that a defect in D1 processing
is the cause of reduced recovery in the fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8
mutant also. However, experiments indicate that D1 replacement in
higher plants may be more complex and more highly regulated than in
cyanobacteria. In contrast to cyanobacteria, degradation of D1 in
higher plants is regulated by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation
processes (Aro et al., 1992 ; Koivuniemi et al., 1995 ; Rintamaki et al.,
1996 ). Moreover, degradation of D1 is a highly temperature-sensitive process in higher plants and appears to be a barrier to removal of
damaged D1 at low temperatures (Aro et al., 1993 ). The role of
phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in D1 breakdown in higher plants may
be to couple protein degradation with insertion of newly synthesized D1
and reassembly of the PSII complex (Koivuniemi et al., 1995 ). If this
is correct, it may be difficult to differentiate between breakdown of
photodamaged D1 and synthesis, insertion, or processing of new D1 as
the basis of the photoinhibition phenotype in the triple mutant.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions
Wild-type and mutant Arabidopsis plants were grown in 4-inch
pots on a peat-based medium in a controlled environment chamber at
22°C under 120 µmol quanta m 2 s 1 white
light provided by cool-white fluorescent lamps. Circular discs 1 cm in
diameter excised from fully expanded leaves of 14- to 20-d-old plants
were used for experiments.
All of the mutants of Arabidopsis described in this study were isolated
from the Columbia wild type. The isolation and characterization of the
fab1, fad5, and fad6
mutants as well as the triple mutant fad3-2 fad7-2 fad8
have been described elsewhere (Browse et al., 1989 ; Kunst et al., 1989 ;
Wu et al., 1994 ; McConn and Browse, 1996 ). All of these mutants have
exhibited chlorosis or other symptoms of damage after prolonged
exposure to chilling temperatures ranging from 2°C to 5°C (Vijayan
et al., 1997 ).
Fluorescence Measurements
Chlorophyll fluorescence from leaf tissue was measured using a
PAM Fluorometer (Walz, Effeltrich, Germany). The ratio of variable fluorescence to maximal fluorescence
(Fv/Fm) representing
the potential quantum yield of PSII photochemistry was measured in dark-adapted leaf tissue. Leaf discs were floated on distilled water in
brass containers, and dark-adapted at 22°C for 30 min before each
Fv/Fm measurement
was made. Leaf discs were then equilibrated to the desired temperature
in dark before they were exposed to photoinhibitory or recovery treatment.
Measurement of PSII Activity in Isolated Thylakoids
Thylakoids were isolated by grinding Arabidopsis leaves in an
ice-cold buffer containing 300 mM sorbitol, 25 mM Tris (pH 7.8), 10 mM NaCl, 5 mM
MgCl2, and 5 mM EDTA with a chilled mortar and pestle. The homogenate was then filtered through four layers of miracloth, and the filtrate was centrifuged at 5,000g
for 3 min at 4°C. The thylakoid pellet obtained was washed in
ice-cold grinding buffer devoid of EDTA, re-suspended in the same
buffer, and stored on ice for further use. Total chlorophyll content of
the thylakoid suspensions was estimated in 80% (v/v) acetone
using the equations of MacKinney (1941) . Light-saturated rates of PSII
electron transport in isolated thylakoids were measured in an oxygen
electrode (Hansatech, King's Lynn, UK) as rates of O2
evolved by thylakoids at 22°C, using water as electron donor and
dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP) as electron acceptor. The assays were
performed in 1 mL of a reaction mixture containing 25 mM
Tris (pH 7.4), 100 mM sorbitol, 10 mM NaCl, 5 mM NH4Cl, and 100 µM DCPIP as an
electron acceptor and thylakoids containing 10 µg of chlorophyll. The
reaction chamber was illuminated at a photon flux density of 800 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1 with white light from a slide
projector passed through 6 cm of a 0.1 M CuSO4
solution. The reaction mixture was maintained at 22°C by circulating
water through a jacket surrounding the reaction chamber. The
light-mediated increase in oxygen concentration in the reaction mixture
was plotted on a chart recorder, and the rate of oxygen evolution was
calculated from the slope of the plot.
Photoinhibition of PSII in thylakoids was induced by illuminating
thylakoids with 2,000 µmol m 2 s 1 white
light from a projector lamp. Thylakoids were suspended in the reaction
buffer at a concentration of 100 µg chlorophyll mL 1 in
the absence of DCPIP and NH4Cl in a plexiglass incubation chamber surrounded by a water jacket maintained at 22°C. Aliquots of
thylakoid samples were drawn from the chamber at various time intervals
and used for measurement of PSII electron transport immediately.
Photoinhibition and Recovery of PSII in Leaf Discs
Photoinhibition of PSII was induced in a temperature-controlled
chamber by illuminating the leaf discs under 1,200 or 1,600 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1 white light from a 1,000-W
metal halide lamp (Philips, Somerset, NJ), passed through a 4-inch heat
filter consisting of 0.1 M CuSO4 solution. Ten
to 12 randomly selected leaves were sampled after different time
intervals and dark-adapted for 30 min at 22°C before Fv/Fm was
measured as described above.
Recovery of PSII from photoinhibition was measured in leaf discs
previously photoinhibited at 3°C for 3 h.
Fv/Fm was then measured in the photoinhibited leaf discs after dark incubation at
22°C for 30 min. Samples of leaf discs were subsequently equilibrated at one of five temperatures (7°C, 12°C, 17°C, 22°C, or 27°C)
in the dark before being shifted to a weakly illuminated (70 µmol quanta m 2 s 1) chamber at the same
temperature for recovery. Ten to 12 discs each were removed at
different time intervals and incubated in the dark for 30 min at 22°C
before measurement of
Fv/Fm.
Lincomycin Treatment
Petioles of wild-type and mutant Arabidopsis leaves freshly
excised under water were immersed in 1 mM aqueous solution
of the prokaryotic protein synthesis inhibitor lincomycin and incubated for 3 h at 22°C in a chamber under dim white light (15 µmol
quanta m 2 s 1). Petioles of control leaves
were immersed in distilled water and incubated under similar
conditions. The lincomycin-treated leaves did not recover from
photoinhibition after 6 h in low light, whereas the control leaves
exhibited recovery comparable with untreated leaves, indicating that
lincomycin treatment effectively inhibited D1 synthesis.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received February 14, 2002; accepted March 10, 2002.
1
This work was supported by the U.S. National
Science Foundation (grant no. IBN-0084329) and by the Agricultural
Research Center, Washington State University.
2
Present address: Department of Plant Sciences,
University of Saskatchewan, 51 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, SK, Canada S7N 5A8.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail jab{at}wsu.edu; fax 509-335-7643.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.004341.
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