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First published online January 14, 2009; 10.1104/pp.108.132621 Plant Physiology 149:1568-1578 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Experimental Evidence for Ascorbate-Dependent Electron Transport in Leaves with Inactive Oxygen-Evolving Complexes1,[OA] z GarabInstitute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Center, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H–6701 Szeged, Hungary
Previously, we showed that in barley (Hordeum vulgare) leaves with heat-inactivated oxygen-evolving complexes, photosystem II (PSII) has access to a large pool of alternative electron donors. Based on in vitro data, we proposed that this donor was ascorbate, yet this hypothesis has not been substantiated in vivo. In this paper, with the aid of chlorophyll a fluorescence induced by short (5-ms) light pulses and 820-nm absorbance transient measurements on wild-type and ascorbate-deficient (vtc2-1) mutant leaves of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), we show that in heat-treated leaves the rate of electron donation to PSII as well as the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-sensitive electron transport toward photosystem I depend on the ascorbate content of the leaves: upon ascorbate treatment, the donation half-time in the wild type and the mutant decreased from 25 to 22 ms and from 55 to 32 ms, respectively. Thermoluminescence measurements show that TyrZ+ is involved in the electron transfer from ascorbate to PSII. These data and the similar ascorbate dependencies of the heat-treated and the tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane-treated thylakoid membranes, with maximal donation half-times of about 16 ms, show that ascorbate is capable of supporting a sustained electron transport activity in leaves containing inactivated oxygen-evolving complexes. This alternative electron transport appears to be ubiquitous in the plant kingdom and is present in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and its rate depends on the physiological state of the plants and on environmental conditions. Our data suggest that ascorbate, as an alternative PSII electron donor, plays a physiological role in heat-stressed plants.
The oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) is one of the most vulnerable complexes of the photosynthetic electron transport chain. It is particularly sensitive to heat stress, and it is probably the first target of donor-side photoinhibition as well (Murata et al., 2007
Previously, we showed that when the oxygen evolution in barley (Hordeum vulgare) leaves was inhibited by a short heat pulse (50°C, 40 s in a water bath), PSII was supplied by electrons from a large pool of alternative donors (Tóth et al., 2007a
Asc is important in scavenging reactive oxygen species (for review, see Asada, 2006
In vitro studies have shown that Asc can replace water, the terminal donor of PSII, when the OEC is inactivated. When added to thylakoids isolated from heat-treated Euglena gracilis cells, Asc has been shown to support the DCMU-sensitive photoreduction of NADP+; whereas heat-treated thylakoids exhibited no or very low Hill activity, 14 mM Asc restored the electron transport to about 70% of its original activity (Katoh and San Pietro, 1967
In order to examine the hypothesis that Asc can serve as an alternative electron donor in vivo in whole leaves containing inactivated OECs, we monitored the activity of the two photosystems with fast chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence and 820-nm absorbance transient measurements in wild-type Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and its Asc-deficient mutant, vtc2-1 (Conklin et al., 2000
Dependence of the Alternative Electron Transport through PSII on the Asc Content of Leaves
In order to clarify the putative role of Asc as an alternative electron donor, first we compared wild-type and Asc-deficient mutant Arabidopsis plants (vtc mutants; Conklin et al., 2000
If the oxygen evolution is completely inhibited, the J and I steps disappear and the K peak develops (Srivastava et al., 1997
The t1/2 to PSII with inactive OEC can be determined, as described earlier (Tóth et al., 2007a
In order to make certain that the observed differences in intact leaves are not caused by an inherent difference between the leaves other than the Asc content, we incubated intact leaves in Asc solution before the heat pulse. This treatment significantly accelerated the electron donation rates in the vtc2-1 mutant: the t1/2 decreased from 55 to 32 ms. In the case of wild-type plants, the t1/2 decreased to a much smaller extent, from 25 to 22 ms (Fig. 2C). These data show that the rate of electron donation depends substantially on the Asc content of the leaves.
In order to confirm that also under these experimental conditions regeneration of the K peak originated from electron donation to PSII, rather than from recombination, we monitored the electron transport toward PSI. This was performed by measuring the light-induced absorbance changes at 820 nm. This transient is an indicator of the changes in the redox states of P700 and plastocyanin (PC), with PC being the minor component (Klughammer and Schreiber, 1991
In the case of wild-type Arabidopsis leaves subjected to a heat pulse that fully inactivated the OECs, the 820-nm absorbance increase was followed by rereduction of P700+ and PC+ (Fig. 3). These data agree well with our earlier observations on heat-treated barley leaves (Tóth et al., 2007a
The dependence of the alternative electron donation to PSII on Asc can be further substantiated by fast Chl a fluorescence measurements on thylakoid membranes isolated from heat-treated leaves. These measurements, and data on Tris-treated thylakoid membranes, are also suitable for determining the Km for Asc that is associated with the electron donation to PSII. Polarographic measurements performed in the presence of phenyl-p-benzoquinone as electron acceptor showed that thylakoid membranes isolated from heat-treated barley leaves (48°C, 40 s) and Tris-washed thylakoids contained no active OECs (data not shown). As shown in Figure 4
, in the absence of Asc, only the first light pulse was able to induce variable fluorescence, the K peak, which originated from a charge separation and the oxidation of TyrZ (see first section of "Results" above). The second light pulse spaced 200 ms after the first one induced no sizeable peak, as expected, since during thylakoid isolation the Asc in the lumen is strongly diluted or lost (Ivanov and Edwards, 2000
The regeneration of the K peak on a second light pulse with a 200-ms dark interval was plotted versus the Asc concentration of the sample (Fig. 5A ). Half-saturation was reached between 4.2 and 4.5 mM Asc in both heat-treated and Tris-washed samples. This value, the apparent Km value for Asc in Tris-treated thylakoids and in thylakoids isolated from heat-treated leaves, compares well with 2.5 mM determined by Mano et al. (2004)
The regeneration of the K peak as a function of the dark interval between the light pulses was studied at saturating Asc concentration (50 mM; Fig. 5B). There was no significant difference between heat-treated and Tris-washed samples. It is also interesting that the maximal t1/2 (15.5 ms) in thylakoids in the presence of 50 mM Asc was comparable to the half-time measured with the same heat treatment on intact barley leaves (t1/2 = 23.6 ms; Table I ).
These results show that the regeneration of the K peak strictly depends on the Asc concentration. When there is no Asc added, the K peak does not regenerate, confirming that the electrons responsible for its regeneration do not arise from remaining OEC activity. Furthermore, the comparison of Tris-washed thylakoids and thylakoids isolated from heat-treated leaves also shows that the heat pulse does not have any effect on the regeneration of the K peak other than the inactivation of OECs.
Information on the pathway of electron donation from Asc to PSII was obtained using thermoluminescence (TL) measurements. In thylakoid membranes in which the oxygen evolution has been inactivated, the B band, which is produced by recombination reactions between the S2/S3 states of the OEC and QB– (for review, see Vass, 2003
Upon the addition of Asc to heat-treated thylakoid membranes, the AT band significantly decreased (Fig. 6
), indicating that TyrZ+ was reduced by Asc. When the TL measurements were carried out on heat-treated leaves that naturally contain Asc, the AT band did not appear at all (Fig. 6). These data indicate that Asc provided electrons to PSII via TyrZ+. Earlier EPR data obtained with artificial electron donors are in agreement with the involvement of TyrZ in the reaction pathway between Asc and PSII (Yerkes and Babcock, 1980
Detection of Alternative Electron Transport in Different Organisms, under Different Physiological Conditions, and in Moderately Heat-Stressed Leaves
We investigated the occurrence of alternative electron donors in different photosynthetic organisms, including the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803, the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the moss Marchantia polymorpha, the fern Nephrolepis exaltata, the coniferous plant Juniperus chinensis, as well as in pea and Agropyron elongatum (Szarvasi-1; a new variety of tall wheatgrass that is produced in Hungary for its biomass). Following a heat treatment, the alternative electron donors could be detected in all investigated species and the t1/2, determined by two 5-ms light pulses with varying dark intervals, was found in a relatively narrow range, between 15 and 37 ms (Table I). We also observed that the t1/2 varied with the age of the plants. In 1-week-old barley seedlings, the t1/2 was 23.6 ms, whereas in 1-month-old plants, it decreased to 16.7 ms. In plants exposed to moderate salt stress (250 mM NaCl treatment) before the heat treatment, the electron donation became faster than in the control (18 and 23 ms, respectively). In contrast, stronger salt stress (watering the plants with 1 M NaCl) decelerated the alternative electron donation (t1/2 = 31.6 ms; Table I). The length of the dark adaptation also influenced the rate: if the plants were dark adapted for 24 h, electron donation became much slower, which might be due to the depletion of Asc in the dark (Kiyota et al., 2006 The functioning of the alternative electron donors was investigated in moderately stressed leaves as well. After a heat treatment of the leaves at 39°C for 15 min, approximately 50% of the OECs were inactivated in both the wild type and mutant plants, as shown by the equal, approximately 50% decrease in the amplitude of the B bands of the TL curves (Fig. 7B ). As already shown in Figure 1, in another set of experiments, the fast Chl a fluorescence transients were almost identical in untreated wild-type and vtc2-1 leaves (Fig. 7A). Also, in heat-stressed leaves, the fluorescence transients were very similar up to about 100 ms, which confirms that the two genotypes were equally inhibited by the heat stress. However, there was a large difference between the fluorescence amplitudes at around 1 s, which shows that the extent of QA reduction was higher in the wild type than in the Asc-deficient mutant. Since the extent of inhibition in oxygen evolution was the same in the two genotypes, this difference must be attributed to the differences in the Asc content of the leaves. In perfect agreement with the above Chl a fluorescence induction data, the rereduction of P700+ was decelerated in the 39°C-treated mutant leaves, whereas, again, there was no difference between the untreated leaves (Fig. 7C).
In order to establish the role of Asc in the linear electron transport, we determined the amount of oxidized P700+ in leaves illuminated with red light (95 µmol photons m–2 s–1) in the two genotypes before and after moderate heat stress. This was performed following the protocol of Schreiber and Klughammer (2008)
In this study, we have provided experimental evidence that Asc is a naturally occurring alternative electron donor of PSII. We have shown that the t1/2 to PSII depends on the Asc content of the leaves: in wild-type Arabidopsis plants, it is approximately 25 ms, whereas in the Asc-deficient vtc2-1 mutant, it is much slower, about 55 ms, which, however, can be accelerated with externally supplied Asc to a level approaching the wild-type level (Fig. 2). Our method for determining the t1/2 to PSII is based on the regeneration kinetics of the K peak of the fast fluorescence transient (Fig. 2). In heat-treated leaves, the rate of regeneration of this peak depends on the Asc content of the sample. The regeneration is slower in the Asc-deficient mutant than in the wild type, and it does not occur in isolated thylakoid membranes but can be restored by externally supplied Asc (Figs. 2 and 4). These data show that the electrons originate from an external pool, the Asc, and not from cofactors of PSII (e.g. cytochrome b559, TyrD, ChlZ, or β-carotene). The role of recombination and cyclic electron transport around PSII is also ruled out by the detection of the Asc-dependent electron transport to PSI, which is sensitive to DCMU (Fig. 3). TL measurements on leaves and thylakoids (Fig. 6) suggest that TyrZ is involved in the reaction pathway between Asc and PSII. (The possible involvement of residual Mn atoms, mediating between Asc and TyrZ, cannot be ruled out, although this is unlikely; see below.)
The Asc concentration has been estimated to be approximately 4 mM in the thylakoid lumen (Foyer and Lelandais, 1996
For a sustained electron transport from Asc to PSII, an efficient Asc regeneration system is required. It has been shown that upon donating electrons to PSII, Asc is oxidized to monodehydroascorbate radical in the lumen (Mano et al., 1997
Based on in vitro studies, it has been suggested that Asc can donate electrons also to PSI, when electrons from PSII are blocked by DCMU, and support substantial electron flow at high Asc concentrations (50 mM; Mano et al., 1997
The alternative electron donation to PSII appears to be ubiquitous in the plant kingdom and is present in C. reinhardtii (Table I). It also appears to operate in Synechocystis PCC 6803, even though cyanobacteria contain no or only low amounts of Asc (Tel-Or et al., 1986 It should be noted that the affinity of PSII to Asc might be very different in different species. It is equally possible that the applied heat treatments lead to different conformations on the donor side of PSII (i.e. release of two or more Mn atoms and of the extrinsic proteins). These factors, as discussed below, can influence the accessibility of Asc to PSII.
Our finding that the rate of alternative electron donation, with inactivated OECs, depends on environmental conditions and the age of plants (Table I) appears to indicate a dependence on the physiological state of plants. This is conceivable because the Asc content is known to vary, for example, with the growth light intensity (Grace and Logan, 1996
Evidently, under physiological conditions, inactivation of all OECs, as induced by high-temperature heat pulses (48°C–50°C, 40 s), is unlikely to occur. It must be emphasized that our purpose with the use of these heat pulses was merely to provide clear evidence for the role of Asc as PSII electron donor. This can most clearly be shown when all OECs are fully inactivated while keeping the activity of the reaction centers (Tóth et al., 2007a
In the moderate temperature range (e.g. between 10°C and 25°C), the inactivation of the OECs is a stochastic event. As long as its extent is low, detection of the electron donation from Asc might not be possible. Similarly, the existence of the Asc-dependent electron transport is difficult to identify if, together with the OEC, or as a consecutive event, the photochemical reaction center is also damaged. Whereas in moderately UV-B-stressed isolated thylakoid membranes electron donation from Asc could clearly be observed, higher doses of UV-B light extensively inactivated the reaction centers and the photooxidation of Asc disappeared (Mano et al., 2004
There are environmental conditions in which oxygen evolution is substantially inhibited. It has been shown in potato (Solanum tuberosum) leaves that the disassembly of OECs occurs at relatively low temperatures, with a half-inactivation temperature being 39°C, whereas the inactivation of the reaction centers occurs at somewhat higher temperatures (Havaux, 1993
The most likely physiological significance of this alternative electron donation, as suggested previously by Mano et al. (1997) In conclusion, our data provide experimental evidence that Asc donates electrons to PSII reaction centers that possess no active OEC and maintains a DCMU-sensitive linear electron transport in leaves. This mechanism, which appears to be ubiquitous in organisms with oxygenic photosynthesis, might represent a defense mechanism, which appears to be particularly important in plants exposed to heat stress.
Plant Materials and Growth Conditions Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) Col-0 wild-type plants and Asc-deficient vtc2 mutants were grown in a greenhouse under short-day conditions, from September to January, at approximately 200 µmol m–2 s–1 photon flux density. The night temperature was 18°C to 20°C, and the day temperature was 22°C to 25°C. Barley (Hordeum vulgare Scarlett), Juniperus chinensis, pea (Pisum sativum Rajnai törpe), and Agropyron elongatum Szarvasi-1 plants were grown in a greenhouse in the summer season. The temperature was 20°C to 27°C during the day and 20°C to 23°C at night, and no supplemental light was provided. Barley seedlings were used when they were 7 d old except in a set of experiments in which 1-month-old plants were used. Weak, moderate, and relatively strong salt stresses (the Fv/Fm values were unchanged, 0.81, for all treatments) on barley plants were applied by watering 4-d-old barley seedlings once with 250 mM, 500 mM, or 1 M NaCl, respectively, and the plants were measured when they were 8 d old. Marchantia polymorpha and Nephrolepis exaltata were grown under similar conditions but at moderate light intensity. Cells of Synechocystis PCC 6803 and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii were grown photoautotrophically in BG11 (pH 7.5) and TAP (pH 7.0) media, respectively. Cells were grown at 30°C under continuous illumination at 30 µmol m–2 s–1 photon flux density. Cultures were aerated on a gyratory shaker operating at 100 rpm.
Complete inactivation of oxygen evolution was achieved by a heat pulse: immersing whole leaves in a water bath for a very short time (40 s) at elevated temperature (49°C for Arabidopsis). This treatment induces no visible symptoms or secondary effects (Tóth et al., 2005
M. polymorpha, N. exaltata, J. chinensis, pea, A. elongatum, and barley were treated at 48°C, 52°C, 54°C, 48°C, 50°C, and 48°C, respectively, where complete inactivation of oxygen evolution occurred. In a set of experiments, 48°C to 58°C treatments were applied to 7-d-old barley seedlings and 1-month-old barley plants were treated at 50°C. In all cases, oxygen evolution became zero as measured on thylakoids isolated from heat-treated leaves using phenyl-p-benzoquinone as an electron acceptor (Tóth et al., 2005
Moderate heat stress was induced by treating detached Arabidopsis leaves at 39°C for 15 min in a water bath in the dark, and then leaves were cooled down in room-temperature water (Havaux, 1993
Asc and dehydroascorbate contents of wild-type Arabidopsis and vtc2 mutants were determined by a spectroscopic method using the absorption at 265 nm of Asc (Takahama and Oniki, 1992 Feeding of Asc was performed by incubating detached Arabidopsis leaves in 20 mM Na-Asc. Leaves were placed in petri dishes and covered with one layer of filter paper for 2 h at a photon flux density of approximately 15 µmol m–2 s–1. This was followed by a heat pulse of 49°C, and the measurements were carried out after 30 min of dark adaptation. Asc+DCMU treatments were carried out in a similar way; the DCMU concentration was 200 µM, and the solution contained 1% ethanol to dissolve DCMU.
Thylakoids for fluorescence measurements were isolated according to the method of Robinson and Yocum (1980)
For TL and oxygen evolution measurements, heat-treated and untreated leaves were homogenized in 40 mM HEPES (pH 7.5) containing 0.4 M Suc, 1% (w/v) bovine serum albumin, 5 mM MgCl2, 15 mM NaCl, and 2 mM Na2-EDTA. The homogenate was filtered and centrifuged at 3,000g for 5 min, and then the pellet was resuspended in the same buffer and centrifuged at 3,000g for 5 min. Then the membrane pellet was resuspended in 40 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.5) containing 0.4 M Suc, 5 mM MgCl2, and 15 mM NaCl. The Chl content was adjusted (Porra et al., 1989
Leaves were kept in darkness after the heat treatments and measured within 30 to 60 min. Fluorescence measurements were carried out at room temperature with a special version of the Handy-PEA instrument (Hansatech Instruments) that allows reducing the length of the measurement to 300 µs. Leaf samples were illuminated with continuous red light (3,500 µmol photons m–2 s–1, 650-nm peak wavelength; the spectral half-width was 22 nm; the light emitted by the LEDs is cut off at 700 nm by a near-infrared short-pass filter). The light was provided by an array of three LEDs focused on a circle of 5 mm diameter of the sample surface. The first reliably measured point of the fluorescence transient is at 20 µs, which was taken as F0. The length of the measurements was 5 s or 5 ms. In the case of the double 5-ms pulses, the dark intervals between the light pulses were 2.3, 9.6, 16.9, 31.5, 38.8, 53.4, 75.3, 100, 200, or 500 ms. In the case of fluorescence measurements on isolated thylakoid membranes, 20 µL of suspension (20 µg Chl mL–1) was placed on a Whatman glass microfiber filter (GF/C) inserted in a leaf clip.
The light-induced redox changes of P700 were monitored by measuring absorbance changes at 820 nm using a PAM 101 Chl fluorometer (Heinz Walz) equipped with an ED 800 T emitter-detector system. Continuous blue actinic light (approximately 1,800 µmol photons m–2 s–1 for 2 s) was provided by a halogen lamp (KL 1500; Schott) connected to an electronic shutter. Absorbance changes at 820 nm were recorded in continuous light on a millisecond time scale. In a set of experiments, a Dual-PAM-100 instrument was used to measure the 820-nm absorbance changes and the steady-state oxidation level of P700 during continuous illumination, relative to the maximum photooxidizable amount (Klughammer and Schreiber, 1994
TL was measured using a custom-made TL apparatus described by Wiessner and Demeter (1988)
We thank Prof. Patricia Conklin (State University of New York College at Cortland) for providing us with the vtc2 mutants, Prof. Jun'ichi Mano (Yamaguchi University) and Dr. Gert Schansker (University of Geneva) for helpful discussions, and Dr. Éva Hideg (Biological Research Center Szeged) for advice on the method of determination of the Asc content of leaves. We also thank Dr. László Kovács (Biological Research Center Szeged) for his help with the oxygen evolution and P700 measurements, Ms. Mary Prathiba Joseph (Biological Research Center Szeged) for help with growing Arabidopsis plants, and Dr. Rudolf Tóth-Boconádi (Biological Research Center Szeged) for his help in the UV-B experiments. Received November 14, 2008; accepted January 9, 2009; published January 14, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the Hungarian Research Foundation (grant nos. PD72718 and K63252 to S.Z.T. and G.G., respectively), by the Bolyai János Research Foundation of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (research scholarship to S.Z.T.), and by the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India (BOYSCAST fellowship to J.T.P.).
2 Present address: Post Graduate and Research Department of Botany, St. Thomas College, Pala, Kottayam 686 574, Kerala, India. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Szilvia Z. Tóth (sztoth{at}brc.hu).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.132621 * Corresponding author; e-mail sztoth{at}brc.hu.
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