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Plant Physiology 88:200-206 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Environmental and Stress Physiology

Chloroplast Osmotic Adjustment and Water Stress Effects on Photosynthesis 1

Ashima Sen Gupta and Gerald A. Berkowitz

Department of Horticulture, Cook College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08903

Previous studies have suggested that chloroplast stromal volume reduction may mediate the inhibition of photosynthesis under water stress. In this study, the effects of spinach (Spinacia oleracea, var `Winter Bloomsdale') plant water deficits on chloroplast photosynthetic capacity, solute concentrations in chloroplasts, and chloroplast volume were studied. In situ (gas exchange) and in vitro measurements indicated that chloroplast photosynthetic capacity was maintained during initial leaf water potential ({Psi}w) and relative water content (RWC) decline. During the latter part of the stress period, photosynthesis dropped precipitously. Chloroplast stromal volume apparently remained constant during the initial period of decline in RWC, but as leaf {Psi}w reached –1.2 megapascals, stromal volume began to decline. The apparent maintenance of stromal volume over the initial RWC decline during a stress cycle suggested that chloroplasts are capable of osmotic adjustment in response to leaf water deficits. This hypothesis was confirmed by measuring chloroplast solute levels, which increased during stress. The results of these experiments suggest that stromal volume reduction in situ may be associated with loss of photosynthetic capacity and that one mechanism of photosynthetic acclimation to low {Psi}w may involve stromal volume maintenance.


1 New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Publication No. 12149-14-87, supported by State and Hatch funds. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants DMB 8414769 and 8706240.




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