Abstract

BackgroundPlants are always exposed to dynamic light. The photosynthetic light use efficiency of leaves is lower in dynamic light than in uniform irradiance. Research on the influence of environmental factors on dynamic photosynthesis is very limited. Nitrogen is critical for plants, especially for photosynthesis. Low nitrogen (LN) decreases ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) and thus limits photosynthesis. The decrease in Rubisco also delays photosynthetic induction in LN leaves; therefore, we hypothesized that the difference of photosynthetic CO2 fixation between uniform and dynamic light will be greater in LN leaves compared to leaves with sufficient nitrogen supply.ResultsTo test this hypothesis, soybean plants were grown under low or high nitrogen (HN), and the photosynthetic gas exchange, enzyme activity and protein amount in leaves were measured under uniform and dynamic light. Unexpectedly, dynamic light caused less photosynthetic suppression, rather than more, in LN leaves than in HN leaves. The underlying mechanism was also clarified. Short low-light (LL) intervals did not affect Rubisco activity but clearly deactivated fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) and sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase (SBPase), indicating that photosynthetic induction after a LL interval depends on the reactivation of FBPase and SBPase rather than Rubisco. In LN leaves, the amount of Rubisco decreased more than FBPase and SBPase, so FBPase and SBPase were present in relative excess. A lower fraction of FBPase and SBPase needs to be activated in LN leaves for photosynthesis recovery during the high-light phase of dynamic light. Therefore, photosynthetic recovery is faster in LN leaves than in HN leaves, which relieves the photosynthetic suppression caused by dynamic light in LN leaves.ConclusionsContrary to our expectations, dynamic light caused less photosynthetic suppression, rather than more, in LN leaves than in HN leaves of soybean. This is the first report of a stress condition alleviating the photosynthetic suppression caused by dynamic light.

Highlights

  • Plants are always exposed to dynamic light

  • Photosynthetic gas exchange under steady-state light conditions Low N (LN) supply significantly decreased the contents of nitrogen and chlorophyll and increased the specific leaf area (SLA; Fig. 1a, b)

  • The lower photosynthetic quantum yield (PQY) [33], which was estimated as the initial slope of the linear relationship between the photosynthetic rate (Pn) and photon flux density (PFD) in low light (LL) leaves (Fig. 1c), indicated that the efficiency of light energy use under limited light conditions was restrained by Low nitrogen (LN) supply

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Summary

Introduction

Plants are always exposed to dynamic light. The photosynthetic light use efficiency of leaves is lower in dynamic light than in uniform irradiance. Low nitrogen (LN) decreases ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) and limits photosynthesis. The decrease in Rubisco delays photosynthetic induction in LN leaves; we hypothesized that the difference of photosynthetic CO2 fixation between uniform and dynamic light will be greater in LN leaves compared to leaves with sufficient nitrogen supply. Fast photosynthetic induction requires the rapid activation of Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase / oxygenase (Rubisco) and other Calvin cycle enzymes as well as the rapid opening of stomata [2, 8, 14]. The activation rate of Rubisco is relatively slow; Rubisco is considered the limiting factor of photosynthetic induction under most conditions [2, 16]. Recent studies have reported that the amount of RCA is closely related to the photosynthetic induction rate [22], and improved RCA proteins clearly accelerate photosynthetic induction [23]

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