| Literature DB >> 26538330 |
Arne S Kristoffersen1, Børge Hamre2, Øyvind Frette2, Svein R Erga3.
Abstract
The fluorescence lifetime is a very useful parameter for investigating biological materials on the molecular level as it is mostly independent of the fluorophore concentration. The green alga Tetraselmis blooms in summer, and therefore its response to UV irradiation is of particular interest. In vivo fluorescence lifetimes of chlorophyll a were measured under both normal and UV-stressed conditions of Tetraselmis. Fluorescence was induced by two-photon excitation using a femtosecond laser and laser scanning microscope. The lifetimes were measured in the time domain by time-correlated single-photon counting. Under normal conditions, the fluorescence lifetime was 262 ps, while after 2 h of exposure to UV radiation the lifetime increased to 389 ps, indicating decreased photochemical quenching, likely caused by a damaged and down-regulated photosynthetic apparatus. This was supported by a similar increase in the lifetime to 425 ps when inhibiting photosynthesis chemically using DCMU. Furthermore, the UV-stressed sample was dark-adapted overnight, resulting in a return of the lifetime to 280 ps, revealing that the damage caused by UV radiation is repairable on a relatively short time scale. This reversal of photosynthetic activity was also confirmed by [Formula: see text] measurements.Entities:
Keywords: Chlorophyll; Fluorescence lifetime; Photosynthesis; UV stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26538330 PMCID: PMC4796335 DOI: 10.1007/s00249-015-1092-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Biophys J ISSN: 0175-7571 Impact factor: 1.733
Fig. 1A section of a Tetraselmis cell showing the disposition of the nucleus (N), Golgi bodies (G), mitochondria (M), cup-shaped chloroplast (C), pyrenoid (P), eyespot (E) and flagella (F). Redrawn from (Manton and Parke 1965)
Fig. 2Spectral UV irradiance impinging on the algae inside the bottle (blue curve) together with the corresponding UV index computed as the integrated erythemal (green curve) weighted irradiance divided by 40. The in-bottle irradiance is inferred from a measured UV spectrum outside the bottle and the bottle transmittance
The three first rows show chlorophyll a fluorescence lifetime data for normal conditions, UV-stressed conditions (2 h under full UV-B, UV-A and PAR) and post UV-stressed conditions
| Condition |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | 262 ± 31 | 728 ± 133 | 87 ± 5 |
| UV stressed 2 h | 389 ± 40 | 984 ± 145 | 85 ± 6 |
| Post UV stressed 24 h | 280 ± 42 | 886 ± 142 | 80 ± 5 |
| UV stressed (reduced UV-B) 2 h | 256 ± 23 | 750 ± 120 | 84 ± 5 |
| UV stressed (reduced UV-B) 4 h | 246 ± 25 | 823 ± 134 | 80 ± 7 |
| DCMU inhibited | 425 ± 46 | 1186 ± 321 | 82 ± 7 |
The fourth and fifth rows show chlorophyll a fluorescence lifetime data for half-dose UV-stressed conditions (2 and 4 h under 50 % UV-B in addition to full UV-A and PAR, respectively). The bottom row shows chlorophyll a fluorescence lifetime data for cells inhibited by DCMU. is the short lifetime component, is the long lifetime component, and is the relative amplitude of the short lifetime component. Uncertainties are calculated as one standard deviation
Fig. 3Chlorophyll a fluorescence transient OJIP for Tetraselmis cells after 2 h of the full UV dose (blue) and the same sample after 10 (pink) and 30 (yellow) min in darkness, respectively
The ratios and calculated from OJIP fluorescence transient measurements of chlorophyll a for normal cells, cells exposed to 2 h of full-dose UV radiation, dark-adapted cells for 10 and 30 min after 2 h of full-dose UV, respectively, as well as cells that recovered in darkness for 24 h
| Cell condition |
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Normal dark-adapted cells | 3.86 | 0.74 |
| 2 h full-dose UV irradiation | 1.67 | 0.4 |
| 2 h UV + 10-min dark adaptation | 1.92 | 0.48 |
| 2 h UV + 30-min dark adaptation | 1.96 | 0.49 |
| 24 h recovery in darkness | 3.66 | 0.69 |
Fig. 4Chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime images of three separate Tetraselmis cells for three different conditions: a normal conditions; b after 2 h of UV stress; c kept in darkness overnight