Abstract

The aurea and yellow-green-2 (yg-2) mutants of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) are unable to synthesize the phytochrome chromophore from heme resulting in a block of this branch of the tetrapyrrole pathway. We have previously shown that these mutants also exhibit an inhibition of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) synthesis and it has been hypothesised that this is due to feedback inhibition by heme on the synthesis of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA). In this study we have investigated Pchlide reaccumulation in cotyledons from etiolated wild-type (WT), aurea and yg-2 seedlings using low-temperature fluorescence spectroscopy. WT cotyledons showed two characteristic Pchlide emission maxima at 630 nm (F630) and 655 nm (F655) respectively, while the aurea and yg-2 mutants contained only phototransformable Pchlide F655. Following a white-light flash to WT cotyledons, reaccumulation of phototransformable Pchlide F655 in the first 30 min was absolutely dependent on the presence of Pchlide F630 before the flash. Reaccumulation of Pchlide F630 was not apparent until at least 2 h after the phototransformation. In contrast, Pchlide F630 never accumulated in aurea cotyledons. The relative rates of both Pchlide F655 and total Pchlide synthesis were approximately twice as high in WT compared to aurea. Measurement of ALA synthesis capacity during this period showed that the reduced rate of Pchlide reaccumulation in aurea was due to an inhibition at this step of the pathway. In addition, feeding of ALA resulted in a substantial and equal increase of non-phototransformable Pchlide in both WT and aurea indicating that aurea cotyledons are capable of accumulating high levels of Pchlide that is not associated to the active site of NADPH:Pchlide oxidoreductase (POR). The implications of these results for the mechanism of inhibition of Pchlide synthesis in phytochrome chromophore-deficient mutants and the role of non-phototransformable Pchlide F630 during plastid development are discussed.

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