Abstract

In higher plants, the chloroplast NADH dehydrogenase-like complex (NDH) interacts with photosystem I (PSI) to form the NDH-PSI supercomplex via two minor light-harvesting complex I (LHCI) proteins, Lhca5 and Lhca6. Previously, we showed that in lhca5 and lhca6, NDH still associates with PSI to form smaller versions of the NDH-PSI supercomplex, although their molecular masses are far smaller than that of the full-size NDH-PSI supercomplex. In this study, we show that the NDH complex is present in the monomeric form in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) lhca5 lhca6, implying that NDH interacts with multiple copies of PSI. NDH subunit levels were slightly reduced in immature leaves and more drastically (approximately 50%) in mature leaves of the lhca5 lhca6 double mutant compared with the wild type. Chlorophyll fluorescence analyses detected NDH activity of lhca5 lhca6, suggesting that the supercomplex formation is not essential for NDH activity. However, the severe phenotypes of the lhca5 lhca6 proton gradient regulation5 triple mutant in both plant growth rate and photosynthesis suggest that the function of NDH was impaired in this mutant in vivo. Accumulation of NDH subunits was drastically reduced in lhca5 lhca6 when the light intensity was shifted from 50 to 500 μmol photons m(-2) s(-1). Furthermore, the half-life of NDH subunits, especially that of NDH18, was shorter in monomeric NDH than in the NDH-PSI supercomplex under the high-light conditions. We propose that NDH-PSI supercomplex formation stabilizes NDH and that the process is especially required under stress conditions.

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