Abstract

Plants pigments, such as chlorophyll and carotenoids, absorb light within specific wavelength ranges, impacting their response to environmental light changes. Although the color-specific response of plants to natural levels of light is well described, extreme high-light stress is still being discussed as a general response, without considering the impact of wavelengths in particular response processes. In this study, we explored how the plant proteome coordinated the response and recovery to extreme light conditions (21,000 µmol m−2 s−1) under different wavelengths. Changes at the protein and mRNA levels were measured, together with the photosynthetic parameters of plants under extreme high-light conditions. The changes in abundance of four proteins involved in photoinhibition, and in the biosynthesis/assembly of PSII (PsbS, PsbH, PsbR, and Psb28) in both light treatments were measured. The blue-light treatment presented a three-fold higher non-photochemical quenching and did not change the level of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) or the photosystem II (PSII) complex components when compared to the control, but significantly increased psbS transcripts. The red-light treatment caused a higher abundance of PSII and OEC proteins but kept the level of psbS transcripts the same as the control. Interestingly, the blue light stimulated a more efficient energy dissipation mechanism when compared to the red light. In addition, extreme high-light stress mechanisms activated by blue light involve the role of OEC through increasing PsbS transcript levels. In the proteomics spatial analysis, we report disparate activation of multiple stress pathways under three differently damaged zones as the enriched function of light stress only found in the medium-damaged zone of the red LED treatment. The results indicate that the impact of extreme high-light stress on the proteomic level is wavelength-dependent.

Highlights

  • Photosynthesis is the metabolic process most impacted by abiotic stress

  • non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) measurements can present low values (

  • The analysis of the abundance of the key proteins Psb28, PsbS, PsbH, and PsbR showed a higher concentration of these proteins in the red-light treatment (RLT), indicating a differential recovery of the photosystem II (PSII) and oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) complexes under different wavelength treatments

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Summary

Introduction

Photosynthesis is the metabolic process most impacted by abiotic stress. Plants under full light absorb up to 10% of the available light, directing energy to photosynthetic electron transport [1]. The excess energy must be dealt with through photoprotection mechanisms in order to protect the photosystems from photoinhibition. It is known that photoinactivation is a wavelength-dependent mechanism, and has been studied to some extent in various action spectra, and an extensive review of this topic has been reported by Zavafer et al [2]. There is a lack of knowledge on how extreme light intensities can impact the proteome of plants under different wavelengths beyond the levels of photoinhibition. There is little information on how physiological parameters such as nonphotochemical quenching and photosynthetic rate are impacted by extreme high-light treatments

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