Plant Physiol, May 2003, Vol. 132, pp. 352-364
Role of the Reversible Xanthophyll Cycle in the Photosystem II
Damage and Repair Cycle in Dunaliella
salina1
EonSeon
Jin,2
Kittisak
Yokthongwattana,2
Juergen E.W.
Polle,3 and
Anastasios
Melis*
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, 111 Koshland Hall,
University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3102
The Dunaliella salina photosynthetic
apparatus organization and function was investigated in wild type (WT)
and a mutant (zea1) lacking all
,
-epoxycarotenoids
derived from zeaxanthin (Z). The zea1 mutant lacked
antheraxanthin, violaxanthin, and neoxanthin from its thylakoid
membranes but constitutively accumulated Z instead. It also lacked the
so-called xanthophyll cycle, which, upon irradiance stress, reversibly
converts violaxanthin to Z via a de-epoxidation reaction. Despite the
pronounced difference observed in the composition of
,
-epoxycarotenoids between WT and zea1, no
discernible difference could be observed between the two strains in
terms of growth, photosynthesis, organization of the photosynthetic
apparatus, photo-acclimation, sensitivity to photodamage, or recovery
from photo-inhibition. WT and zea1 were probed for the
above parameters over a broad range of growth irradiance and upon light
shift experiments (low light to high light shift and vice versa). A
constitutive accumulation of Z in the zea1 strain did
not affect the acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to
irradiance, as evidenced by indistinguishable irradiance-dependent adjustments in the chlorophyll antenna size and photosystem content of
WT and zea1 strain. In addition, a constitutive
accumulation of Z in the zea1 strain did not affect
rates of photodamage or the recovery of the photosynthetic apparatus
from photo-inhibition. However, Z in the WT accumulated in parallel
with the accumulation of photodamaged PSII centers in the chloroplast
thylakoids and decayed in tandem with a chloroplast recovery from
photo-inhibition. These results suggest a role for Z in the protection
of photodamaged and disassembled PSII reaction centers, apparently
needed while PSII is in the process of degradation and replacement of
the D1/32-kD reaction center protein.
1
This work was supported by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture-National Research Initiative (grant no.
FD-2002-35100-12278-MELI-08/04).
2
These authors contributed equally to the paper.
3
Present address: Department of Biology, Brooklyn
College, 2900 Bedford Avenue, 200NE, Brooklyn, NY 11210.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail melis{at}nature.berkeley.edu; fax
510-642-4995.
© 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists