Abstract

Photosynthetic organisms often experience extreme light conditions that can cause hyper-reduction of the chloroplast electron transport chain, resulting in oxidative damage. Accumulating evidence suggests that mitochondrial respiration and chloroplast photosynthesis are coupled when cells are absorbing high levels of excitation energy. This coupling helps protect the cells from hyper-reduction of photosynthetic electron carriers and diminishes the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). To examine this cooperative protection, here we characterized Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants lacking the mitochondrial alternative terminal respiratory oxidases, CrAOX1 and CrAOX2. Using fluorescent fusion proteins, we experimentally demonstrated that both enzymes localize to mitochondria. We also observed that the mutant strains were more sensitive than WT cells to high light under mixotrophic and photoautotrophic conditions, with the aox1 strain being more sensitive than aox2 Additionally, the lack of CrAOX1 increased ROS accumulation, especially in very high light, and damaged the photosynthetic machinery, ultimately resulting in cell death. These findings indicate that the Chlamydomonas AOX proteins can participate in acclimation of C. reinhardtii cells to excess absorbed light energy. They suggest that when photosynthetic electron carriers are highly reduced, a chloroplast-mitochondria coupling allows safe dissipation of photosynthetically derived electrons via the reduction of O2 through AOX (especially AOX1)-dependent mitochondrial respiration.

Highlights

  • Photosynthetic organisms often experience extreme light conditions that can cause hyper-reduction of the chloroplast electron transport chain, resulting in oxidative damage

  • It was proposed that photosynthetically produced electrons, especially those generated during exposure of plants and algae to excess excitation energy, can be routed to mitochondrial respiration, which in turn can prevent hyper-reduction of redox components in the plastid and lessen the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and consequent cellular damage [11, 19]

  • CrAOX1 likely helps control the ratio of reduced to oxidized forms of ubiquinone in mitochondria, and mitochondrial redox balancing appears to be coupled to plastid redox poise, which has a crucial role in protecting the photosynthetic machinery from hyper-reduction, oxidative damage, and high light (HL)-induced cell death

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

Grossman From the Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California 94305

Edited by Ursula Jakob
Alternative oxidase allows survival in high light
Results
Impact of AOX loss on fitness under HL exposure
Discussion
Energetic interactions between chloroplast and mitochondria
Growth conditions and strains
Subcellular localization of AOXs
Chlorophyll concentration and cell count
Spectrophotometric measurements
Chlorophyll fluorescence analysis
ROS measurements
Full Text
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