| Literature DB >> 27639727 |
Guangyan Ni1,2, Gabrielle Zimbalatti1, Cole D Murphy1, Audrey B Barnett3, Christopher M Arsenault1, Gang Li1,4, Amanda M Cockshutt1, Douglas A Campbell5.
Abstract
Micromonas strains of small prasinophyte green algae are found throughout the world's oceans, exploiting widely different niches. We grew arctic and temperate strains of Micromonas and compared their susceptibilities to photoinactivation of Photosystem II, their counteracting Photosystem II repair capacities, their Photosystem II content, and their induction and relaxation of non-photochemical quenching. In the arctic strain Micromonas NCMA 2099, the cellular content of active Photosystem II represents only about 50 % of total Photosystem II protein, as a slow rate constant for clearance of PsbA protein limits instantaneous repair. In contrast, the temperate strain NCMA 1646 shows a faster clearance of PsbA protein which allows it to maintain active Photosystem II content equivalent to total Photosystem II protein. Under growth at 2 °C, the arctic Micromonas maintains a constitutive induction of xanthophyll deepoxidation, shown by second-derivative whole-cell spectra, which supports strong induction of non-photochemical quenching under low to moderate light, even if xanthophyll cycling is blocked. This non-photochemical quenching, however, relaxes during subsequent darkness with kinetics nearly comparable to the temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646, thereby limiting the opportunity cost of sustained downregulation of PSII function after a decrease in light.Entities:
Keywords: Photoinactivation; Photosystem II; Prasinophyte; Xanthophyll cycle
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27639727 PMCID: PMC5247552 DOI: 10.1007/s11120-016-0310-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Photosynth Res ISSN: 0166-8595 Impact factor: 3.573
Fig. 1Representative O2 flash yield data and treatment time course. Oxygen concentration plotted versus time over a light treatment time course. The cell suspension was initially exposed to 300-s darkness for measurement of dark respiration, followed by a period of low light pre-illumination to activate photosynthesis, and then a flash train (9600 single turnover saturating flashes, each flash lasts 25 µs, interspersed by 25-ms dark) to provoke saturating single turnovers of PSII photochemistry (Chow et al. 1989; Suggett et al. 2009; Oxborough et al. 2012). In trial runs, we varied the light level and duration of the flashes to ensure they were saturating (data not shown). After the flash train, cells were again exposed to darkness and respiration immediately measured to approximate the rate of respiration prevailing during the flash train. The difference in O2 slope between the flash train and subsequent darkness was then used to estimate active PSII content in the sample under culture growth conditions. We then exposed cells to consecutive periods of 300 s under a treatment light level. The treatment light level was held constant through a time course of responses or, in some cases, increased in steps for a light response curve. At the end of each 300-s period, a FRR induction (Fig. 2) was applied. In parallel, we continued to use the optode to track O2 evolution under the treatment light levels. After the light treatment, cells were again pre-illuminated, and the O2 flash yield protocol was repeated to estimate active PSII center content after the light treatment. In this example, cells were arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 growing at 10 °C, 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1, treated at 294 μmol photons m−2 s−1, without lincomycin
Fig. 2Representative chlorophyll fluorescence fast repetition rate (FRR) induction traces. a Temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 185 μmol photons m−2 s−1. The initial black dashed line tracks a 300-s dark acclimation followed by FRR induction (open symbol trace) provoked by a train of 40 flashlets (1.2-μs duration, 2-μs intervening dark) applied over 128 μs that cumulatively close Photosystem II (PSII). We use a curve fit (PSIWORX-R; http://sourceforge.net/projects/psiworx/) of this initial FRR induction trace to extract the parameters F 0, the basal fluorescence in the dark acclimated state, F M, the maximal fluorescence with all PSII closed, and the induction parameters σ PSII, the effective absorbance cross section serving PSII photochemistry and ρ, a parameter for excitation connectivity among PSII centers, in the dark acclimated state (Kolber et al. 1998; Laney 2003; Laney and Letelier 2008). Following the train of saturating flashlets, our protocol slows the flash rate, allowing PSII to reopen over a 0.25-s span. We fit this curve of PSII reopening after the saturating flash with a two-phase exponential decay to define τ 1 and τ 2, the fast and slow decay lifetimes reflecting electron transport processes away from PSII (Kolber et al. 1998). After a further 2-s dark period to allow reopening of PSII, we applied a second FRR induction. The black dashed line then spans a subsequent 300 s incubation under a treatment light (400 μmol photons m−2 s−1 in this example) ending with an FRR induction (open symbols) under exposure to the treatment light to define, in the light-acclimated state, F S, the fluorescence in the light-acclimated state, F M′, σ PSII′, and ρ′. We then again applied an FRR induction after a further 2-s dark period to allow reopening of closed PSII centers, for measurement of F 0′2s, F M′2s, and σ PSII′2s Note that in these cells even 2 s of darkness allows a substantial increase from F M′ to F M′2s, reflecting significant relaxation of non-photochemical quenching within 2 s. We used the magnitude of the increase from F M′ to F M′2s to apply a proportional correction to F 0′2s to estimate the actual level of F 0′ that prevailed under illumination, for use in subsequent parameterizations (Table 2). The closed symbol line tracks an FRR induction under treatment light after addition of dithiothreitol to inhibit the xanthophyll cycle deepoxidase enzyme, followed by a 2-s dark period and an additional FRR induction. b Arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 2 °C and 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1. The measurement protocol is the same as for Fig. 2a except the 300-s light treatment was at 97 μmol photons m−2 s−1 in this example. Note that the cells show a much larger downregulation of F M to F M′ after 300-s illumination, but that after a subsequent 2 s of darkness there is only a slight increase to F M′2
Parameters and equations
| Parameter | Equation | Definition, units | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Minimal fluorescence with PSII open | van Kooten and Snel ( | |
|
| Maximal fluorescence with PSII closed | van Kooten and Snel ( | |
|
| Fluorescence at an excitation level | van Kooten and Snel ( | |
|
| Maximal fluorescence with PSII closed in at an excitation level | van Kooten and Snel ( | |
|
| Maximal fluorescence with PSII closed 2 s after excitation | Fig. | |
|
|
| Minimal fluorescence with PSII open, estimated for cells under excitation, including influence of photoinactivation | van Kooten and Snel ( |
|
| Minimal fluorescence with PSII open 2 s after excitation | Fig. | |
|
| 1/{(1/ | Minimal fluorescence with PSII open, estimated for cells under excitation, excluding influence of photoinactivation | Oxborough and Baker ( |
|
| Excitation connectivity among PSII centers | Kolber et al. ( | |
|
| Functional absorbance cross section for PSII photochemistry | Kolber et al. ( | |
|
| Functional absorbance cross section for PSII photochemistry under excitation | Kolber et al. ( | |
|
| Functional absorbance cross section for PSII photochemistry 2 s after excitation | Fig. | |
|
| Slow lifetime for PSII reopening after saturating flash, s | Kolber et al. ( | |
|
| Fast lifetime for PSII reopening after saturating flash, s | Kolber et al. ( | |
| NPQ | ( | Non-photochemical quenching | Genty et al. ( |
| Y(PSII) | ( | Quantum yield for PSII photochemistry | Genty et al. ( |
| Y(NO) | Y(NO) = | Quantum yield for non-regulated non-photochemical excitation dissipation | Genty et al. ( |
| Y(NPQ) |
| Quantum yield for regulated non-photochemical excitation dissipation | Genty et al. ( |
| qP | ( | Photochemical quenching of fluorescence ~ fraction of open PSII | van Kooten and Snel ( |
| kpi |
| First-order rate constant for photoinactivation of PSII, s−1 | Kok ( |
|
|
| Target size for photoinactivation of PSII across multiple excitation levels I, m2 photon−1 | Oliver et al. ( |
| krec |
| First-order rate constant for recovery of photoinactivated PSII, s−1 | Kok ( |
| krecinact |
| First-order rate constant for recovery of photoinactivated PSII, allowing for initial pool of [PSII]inactive
| |
| keqp | 1 − I/(keqp + I) | Half-saturation light level for photochemical quenching, μmol photons m−2 s−1 | |
| kenpq |
| Half-saturation light level for induction of non-photochemical quenching, μmol photons m−2 s−1 | |
| knpq |
| First-order rate constant for induction of non-photochemical quenching, s−1 | |
| knpqslow |
| Zero-order rate constant for time dependent induction of slow phase of non-photochemical quenching | |
| krnpq | First-order rate constant for relaxation of non-photochemical quenching, s−1 | ||
| ā* | The chl-specific absorption coefficient for 400 to 700 nm; m2 (mg chla)−1 | Ciotti et al. ( | |
| PSIIETR |
| PSII electron transport rate | Suggett et al. ( |
Fig. 3Representative blot image showing total FtsH subunit content in arctic and temperate Micromonas. FtsH isoforms from Micromonas form a double band at approximately 55 kDa. Lanes 1–4 contain FtsH standards (90, 45, 22.5, and 11.25 fmoles FtsH). Lanes 5–9 and 16 contain arctic (NCMA 2099) samples not subjected to a treatment light. Lanes 10–15 contain temperate (NCMA 1646) samples not subjected to a treatment light. Lane 17 contains MagicMark XP standard from Life Technologies. Red indicates oversaturation
Strain information, growth and photophysiological properties
|
| NCMA 1646 | NCMA 2099 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Origin | Mediterranean | Baffin Bay | ||
| Growth temperature (°C) | 20 | 2 | 10 | |
| Growth light (μmol photons m−2 s−1) | 20–36 | 185 | 20–36 | 20–36 |
| Cell diameter (μm) | 2–3 | 2–3 | 1–3 | 1–3 |
| chl b/a | 0.98 (0.04) | 0.77 (0.06) | 0.79 (0.01) | 0.73 (0.06) |
| Growth rate (d−1) | 0.42 (0.23) | 1.12 (0.33) | 0.23 (0.14) | 0.34 (0.12) |
|
| 0.57 (0.03) | 0.56 (0.04) | 0.59 (0.01) | 0.49 (0.02) |
|
| 934 (66) | 791 (68) | 747 (52) | 667 (50) |
| ā*, m2 (mg chla)−1 | 0.009 (0.001) | 0.0098 (0.0005) | 0.0092 (0.0004) | 0.0089 (0.0004) |
| fmol FtsH (μg protein−1) | 6.0 (0.7) | 8.4 (0.9) | 9.6 (1.8) | 6.8 (0.2) |
| fmol PsbA (μg protein−1) | 116 (29) | 112 (28) | 79 (20) | 91 (5) |
| fmol [PSII]active (μg protein−1) | 95 (9) | 133 (20) | 42 (8.6) | 65 (5) |
n = 3–35, (SD)
Fig. 4Fluorescence metric of [PSII]active, F 0′Oxborough/σ PSII′ plotted versus [PSII]active (µmol ml−1) determined from oxygen flash yields (Fig. 1). Open symbols show samples measured directly from growth conditions. Closed symbols show samples measured after a high-light treatment to induce some photoinhibition, with or without the presence of lincomycin to block PSII repair. Pooled linear regression with a slope 0.9088, intercept 1.317 × 10−6 and R 2 of 0.7139
Fig. 5Representative time course data of PSII function from Micromonas cultures shifted from growth to higher light, with or without PSII repair. Temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 was grown at 20 °C and 185 μmol photons m−2 s−1, and treated at 400 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 was grown at 2 °C and 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and treated at 97 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Cells were initially exposed to 300 s of dark, followed by 300 s at their growth light, and then 6 (arctic) or 7 (temperate) consecutive periods of 300 s under the treatment light. We then exposed the cells to low recovery light of 12 μmol photons m−2 s−1 for 300 s. At the end of each 300-s period, we applied the FRR induction protocol outlined in Fig. 2, of an FRR induction applied under illumination followed by 2 s of darkness and a second FRR induction. Cells then progressed to their next 300 s of light incubation. Plotted photosynthetic parameters were extracted from these FRR inductions. Data from cells treated with lincomycin to block PSII repair plotted in closed black symbols; data from control cells without lincomycin plotted in open symbols. a, b A light-induced decline in Y(PSII) (or Φ PSII) (Genty et al. 1989; Kramer et al. 2004; Klughammer and Schreiber 2008) was saturated within the first 300 s of the treatment light, with little detectable effect of lincomycin except during the low light recovery, where control temperate NCMA 1646 (a, open symbols) recovered more than lincomycin cells (a, closed symbols). c, d F V′/F M′, the maximal photochemical yield in the light-acclimated state. The difference between control and lincomycin treatments shows the influence of the PSII repair cycle on PSII function over time in the temperate cells (a). PSII repair had only a slight influence on the time course in arctic NCMA 2099 (d), with a marginally larger recovery of F V′/F M′ in the control cells (d, open symbols) compared to lincomycin-treated cells (d, closed symbols). e, f σ PSII′ is the effective absorbance cross section for PSII photochemistry measured in the light-acclimated state. Control temperate cells show a steady σ PSII′ (e, open symbols), whereas lincomycin-treated cells show some increase in σ PSII′ (e, closed symbols). Arctic NCMA 2099 shows a strong downregulation of σ PSII′ in both control and lincomycin treatments (f). g, h F 0′Oxborough/σ PSII′ as an index of [PSII]active. i, j Y(NPQ) is the quantum yield of non-photochemical energy dissipation (Kramer et al. 2004; Klughammer and Schreiber 2008). k, l Fraction of open PSII (qP)
Photosystem II functional parameters from curve fitting (95 % CI)
| Parameter | Temperate NCMA 1646 | Arctic NCMA 2009 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Growth temperature (°C) | 20 | 20 | 2 | 10 |
| Growth light (μmol photons m−2 s−1) | 20–36 | 185 | 20–36 | 20–36 |
| n | 12 | 16 | 35 | 14 |
| Dark | 1.3 × 10−2 (1.3 × 10−3) | 1.0 × 10−2 (0.0014) | 8.4 × 10−3 (1 × 10−3) | 1.3 × 10−2 (1.4 × 10−3) |
| Dark | 3 × 10−4 (1 × 10−5) | 3 × 10−4 (1 × 10−5) | 5.8 × 10−4 (7.3 × 10−5) | 5 × 10−4 (1.7 × 10−5) |
| Growth light | 8.6 × 10−3 (4.6 × 10−4) | 6 × 10−3 (1 × 10−3) | 1.1 × 10−2 (2.9 × 10−3) | 9.5 × 10−3 (2.4 × 10−3) |
| Growth light | 5.5 × 10−4 (2.3 × 10−5) | 4.3 × 10−4 (2.8 × 10−5) | 1.2 × 10−3 (7.3 × 10−5) | 9 × 10−4 (8.2 × 10−5) |
|
| 1.4 × 10−24 (4 × 10−25) | 1.3 × 10−24 (1.4 × 10−25) | 3.6 × 10−24 (5 × 10−25) | 1 × 10−24 (4.3 × 10−25) |
| krec (s−1) | 2 × 10−4 (2 × 10−4) | 5 × 10−4 (9 × 10−5) | 2.7 × 10−4 (9 × 10−5) | 9.2 × 10−5 (2.5 × 10−4) |
| krecinact (s−1) | 2 × 10−4 (9 × 10−5) | 5 × 10−4 (9 × 10−5) | 7 × 10−5 (1.5 × 10−5) | 2 × 10−5 (4.8 × 10−5) |
| keqp (μmol photons m−2 s−1) | 145 (8) | 228 (11) | 64 (4) | 159 (13) |
| DTT keqp (μmol photons m−2 s−1) | 56 (11) | 103 (12) | 59 (6) | 97 (5) |
| kenpq (μmol photons m−2 s−1) |
| 166 (70) | 49 (8) | 159 (53) |
| knpq (s−1) | 0.02 (3.1) | 0.0015 (0.0003) | 0.003 (0.001) | 0.003 (0.0007) |
| knpqslow | <1 × 10−5 | 4.1 × 10−5 (1.5 × 10−5) | 2 × 10−6 (9 × 10−6) | 2 × 10−6 (8 × 10−6) |
| krnpq (s−1) | 1 × 10−7 (1 × 10−4) | 4.1 × 10−4 (6 × 10−5) | 3 × 10−4 (5 × 10−5) | 5.6 × 10−4 (2 × 10−4) |
| DTT kenpq (μmol photons m−2 s−1) | n.d. | n.d. | 39 (14) | 1495 (575) |
| DTT knpq (s−1) | n.d. | n.d. | 0.002 (0.0003) | > |
| DTT knpqslow | n.d. | n.d. | <2 × 10−5 | 1.1 × 10−5 (2.2 × 10−5) |
Italic values indicate poorly constrained value
Fig. 6Photosystem II content and function. a Content of [PSII]active versus PSII protein subunit PsbA. Dotted line indicates 1:1 ratio. b Functional rate constant for repair of [PSII]inactive (krecinact; Table 3) versus rate constant for removal of PsbA protein. Dotted line indicates 1:1 ratio. c Rate constant for removal of PsbA protein versus the ratio of PsbA: [PSII]active. Filled circle, Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Open circle, Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 185 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Filled triangle, Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 2 °C and 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Open triangle, Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 10 °C and 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Mean of n = 3–4 determinations from separate cultures; ±SEM
Fig. 7Whole-cell spectra. a, b Whole-cell visible spectra from temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 (a) or arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 (b) taken directly from growth conditions and captured in an integrating cavity to cancel cell suspension scattering of light. Spectra were normalized to the red chlorophyll peak before averaging. Consistent with the determinations of ā*, the whole-cell spectra were similar across strains and growth conditions. Averaged spectra of similar maximum OD from 3 separate cultures presented, 95 % CI omitted for clarity. Solid lines are the 185 μmol photons m−2 s−1 growth condition for temperate NCMA 1646 (a, c, e) and the 2 °C growth condition for arctic NCMA 2099 (b, d, f). Dashed lines are 36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 growth condition for NCMA 1646 (a, c, e) and the 10 °C growth condition for arctic NCMA 2099 (b, d, f). c, d Second-derivative spectra to detect inflection points of spectra from temperate NCMA 1646 (c) or arctic NCMA 2099 (d). Solid and dashed lines nearly overlay, except from 470 to 500 nm. e, f Second-derivative spectra from 470 to 500 nm in the carotenoid region from temperate NCMA 1646 (e) or arctic NCMA 2099 (f). Note the statistically significant difference (p < 0.05) at 487–488 nm between arctic NCMA 2099 grown at 2 °C (solid line) versus 10 °C (dashed line), reflecting differences in xanthophyll cycle pigment contents
Fig. 82D Plots of PSIIETR without and with lincomycin. Black symbols represent time course data, with data from individual time courses at a particular treatment light linked by connecting lines. Red symbols show light response curve data, with individual light response curves again linked by connecting lines. In the time course experiments, samples were initially measured after dark incubation (t 0 point). They were then exposed to the respective culture growth light (first point in time course) and then held at a treatment light for 4–7 × 300 s with an FRR measurement at the end of each 300-s interval (Fig. 2). Finally, they were shifted back to a low recovery light level of 12 μmol photons m−2 s−1 for a final 1–3 × 300 s, shown by the sharp drop in PSIIETR toward the end of the time course. a Temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 20–36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 without lincomycin. b Temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 20–36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 with lincomycin. c Temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 185 μmol photons m−2 s−1 without lincomycin. d Temperate Micromonas NCMA 1646 grown at 20 °C and 185 μmol photons m−2 s−1 with lincomycin. e Arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 2 °C and 20–36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 without lincomycin. f Arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 2 °C and 20–36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 with lincomycin. g Arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 10 °C and 20–36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 without lincomycin. h Arctic Micromonas NCMA 2099 grown at 10 °C and 20–36 μmol photons m−2 s−1 with lincomycin