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1.
Photosynth Res ; 156(1): 163-177, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35816266

ABSTRACT

The photosynthetic apparatus is a highly modular assembly of large pigment-binding proteins. Complexes called antennae can capture the sunlight and direct it from the periphery of two Photosystems (I, II) to the core reaction centers, where it is converted into chemical energy. The apparatus must cope with the natural light fluctuations that can become detrimental to the viability of the photosynthetic organism. Here we present an atomic scale view of the photoprotective mechanism that is activated on this line of defense by several photosynthetic organisms to avoid overexcitation upon excess illumination. We provide a complete macroscopic to microscopic picture with specific details on the conformations of the major antenna of Photosystem II that could be associated with the switch from the light-harvesting to the photoprotective state. This is achieved by combining insight from both experiments and all-atom simulations from our group and the literature in a perspective article.


Subject(s)
Photosystem II Protein Complex , Salts , Photosystem II Protein Complex/metabolism , Photosynthesis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes/metabolism , Light
2.
J Plant Physiol ; 270: 153618, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35051689

ABSTRACT

The present review highlights the bioenergetic role of polyamines in plant protection and development and proposes a universal model for describing polyamine-mediated stress responses. Any stress condition induces an excitation pressure on photosystem II by reforming the photosynthetic apparatus. To control this phenomenon, polyamines act directly on the molecular structure and function of the photosynthetic apparatus as well as on the components of the chemiosmotic proton-motive force (ΔpH/Δψ), thus regulating photochemical (qP) and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of energy. The review presents the mechanistic characteristics that underline the key role of polyamines in the structure, function, and bioenergetics of the photosynthetic apparatus upon light adaptation and/or under stress conditions. By following this mechanism, it is feasible to make stress-sensitive plants to be tolerant by simply altering their polyamine composition (especially the ratio of putrescine to spermine), either chemically or by light regulation.

3.
PLoS One ; 14(11): e0212243, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31682615

ABSTRACT

One of the most abundant phenolic compounds traced in olive tissues is hydroxytyrosol (HT), a molecule that has been attributed with a pile of beneficial effects, well documented by many epidemiological studies and thus adding value to products containing it. Strong antioxidant capacity and protection from cancer are only some of its exceptional features making it ideal as a potential supplement or preservative to be employed in the nutraceutical, agrochemical, cosmeceutical, and food industry. The HT biosynthetic pathway in plants (e.g. olive fruit tissues) is not well apprehended yet. In this contribution we employed a metabolic engineering strategy by constructing a dual pathway introduced in Escherichia coli and proofing its significant functionality leading it to produce HT. Our primary target was to investigate whether such a metabolic engineering approach could benefit the metabolic flow of tyrosine introduced to the conceived dual pathway, leading to the maximalization of the HT productivity. Various gene combinations derived from plants or bacteria were used to form a newly inspired, artificial biosynthetic dual pathway managing to redirect the carbon flow towards the production of HT directly from glucose. Various biosynthetic bottlenecks faced due to feaB gene function, resolved through the overexpression of a functional aldehyde reductase. Currently, we have achieved equimolar concentration of HT to tyrosine as precursor when overproduced straight from glucose, reaching the level of 1.76 mM (270.8 mg/L) analyzed by LC-HRMS. This work realizes the existing bottlenecks of the metabolic engineering process that was dependent on the utilized host strain, growth medium as well as to other factors studied in this work.

4.
Environ Pollut ; 158(6): 2258-65, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20227805

ABSTRACT

This study investigated if atmospheric ammonia (NH3) pollution around a sheep farm influences the photosynthetic performance of the lichens Evernia prunastri and Pseudevernia furfuracea. Thalli of both species were transplanted for up to 30 days in a semi-arid region (Crete, Greece), at sites with concentrations of atmospheric ammonia of ca. 60 microg/m3 (at a sheep farm), ca. 15 microg/m3 (60 m from the sheep farm) and ca. 2 microg/m3 (a remote area 5 km away). Lichen photosynthesis was analysed by the chlorophyll a fluorescence emission to identify targets of ammonia pollution. The results indicated that the photosystem II of the two lichens exposed to NH(3) is susceptible to this pollutant in the gas-phase. The parameter PI(ABS), a global index of photosynthetic performance that combines in a single expression the three functional steps of the photosynthetic activity (light absorption, excitation energy trapping, and conversion of excitation energy to electron transport) was much more sensitive to NH3 than the FV/FM ratio, one of the most commonly used stress indicators.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/toxicity , Ammonia/toxicity , Animal Husbandry , Animals, Domestic/growth & development , Lichens/drug effects , Photosynthesis/drug effects , Air Pollutants/analysis , Ammonia/analysis , Animals , Chlorophyll/metabolism , Desert Climate , Environmental Monitoring , Greece , Lichens/growth & development
5.
Planta Med ; 74(12): 1496-503, 2008 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18671196

ABSTRACT

Environmental factors are known to influence strongly the accumulation of secondary metabolites in plant tissues. In a previous paper, we studied the contents of (pseudo)hypericin and its immediate precursors in wild populations of various HYPERICUM species on the island of Crete, Greece, in dependence on their developmental stage. In this study, we investigated the effect of the habitat altitude on the total hypericins content of the plants, which is defined as the sum of protohypericin, hypericin, protopseudohypericin and pseudohypericin. Taking into account our previous finding that the highest accumulation is found during the flowering period in June, we collected the aerial parts of spontaneously growing H. PERFORATUM L. , H. TRIQUENTRIFOLIUM Turra , H. EMPETRIFOLIUM Willd. and H. PERFOLIATUM L. during that time frame at elevations between 100 and 600 m above sea level, however, bearing in mind the time lag in development with increasing altitude. HPLC analysis of the plant material, separated again into a flowers and a leaves/petioles fraction, revealed great differences in the total hypericin content in dependence on the altitude of the habitat. Specifically, a clear trend was revealed, showing an increase of the total hypericin content with increasing altitude. However, no changes could be observed in the ratio of hypericin to protohypericin and in that of pseudohypericin to protopseudohypericin. The habitats of the employed plants were again randomly distributed all over Crete. It is proposed that higher light intensities accompanied by enhanced UV-B radiation and lower air temperature might be responsible for the increasing levels of total hypericins with increasing altitude


Subject(s)
Altitude , Hypericum/metabolism , Perylene/analogs & derivatives , Acclimatization , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Flowers/metabolism , Flowers/radiation effects , Geography , Greece , Hypericum/radiation effects , Light , Perylene/metabolism , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Leaves/radiation effects , Species Specificity , Ultraviolet Rays
6.
Z Naturforsch C J Biosci ; 63(1-2): 113-23, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18386499

ABSTRACT

Plants, as well as fungi, use ambient sunlight as information to regulate photomorphogenetic processes. The photobiological control of this information showed that the development of photobiological greenhouse plastic covers simulates a photonic information that leads to a physiological enhancement of plant productivity and fungal disease control, thus minimizing the need for the use of agrochemicals. The main characteristics of these photobiological greenhouse plastic covers are the high transmission of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR, 400-700 nm) combined with an increase of the factor zeta = RL(655-665 nm)/FRL(725-735 nm), which affects the cellular phytochromic equilibrium phi = Pfr/(Pfr + Pr) and regulates the photosynthetic activity and therefore the plant productivity. Additionally, increase of the spectral ratios from the transmitted light: BL(420-500 nm)/nearUV(290-370 nm) and BL(420-500 nm)/ FRL(725-735 nm), cause mainly the induction of biochemical, physiological and morphological responses, regulated by cryptochromes in plants (e.g. inflorescence and infructescence) and mycochrome in fungi (e.g. inhibition of sporulation). In the present work, comparative studies with randomly selected greenhouse plastics showed that small changes in the above-mentioned "photobiological" parameters raise the productivity of tomato plants and inhibit the sporulation of several isolates of the fungal pathogen Botrytis cinerea. Thus, a model for the photoregulation of these two phenomena in greenhouses is proposed.


Subject(s)
Crops, Agricultural/drug effects , Crops, Agricultural/growth & development , Light , Plant Diseases , Agriculture/methods , Biofilms , Botrytis/pathogenicity , Crops, Agricultural/microbiology , Photosynthesis , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Polyethylene , Spores, Fungal/pathogenicity , Sunlight
7.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1767(4): 272-80, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17408588

ABSTRACT

In the present study the green alga Scenedesmus obliquus was used to assess the effects of high salinity (high NaCl-concentration) on the structure and function of the photosynthetic apparatus and the possibility for alleviation by exogenous putrescine (Put). Chlorophyll fluorescence data revealed the range of the changes induced in the photosynthetic apparatus by different NaCl concentrations, which altogether pointed towards an increased excitation pressure. At the same time, changes in the levels of endogenous polyamine concentrations, both in cell and in isolated thylakoid preparations were also evidenced. Certain polyamine changes (Put reduction) were correlated with changes in the structure and function of the photosynthetic apparatus, such as the increase in the functional size of the antenna and the reduction in the density of active photosystem II reaction centers. Thus, exogenously added Put was used to compensate for this stress condition and to adjust the above mentioned changes, so that to confer some kind of tolerance to the photosynthetic apparatus against enhanced NaCl-salinity and permit cell growth even in NaCl concentrations that under natural conditions would be toxic.


Subject(s)
Cytoprotection , Photosystem II Protein Complex/drug effects , Polyamines/pharmacology , Scenedesmus/drug effects , Sodium Chloride/pharmacology , Chlorophyll/metabolism , Osmotic Pressure/drug effects , Photosynthesis/drug effects , Photosystem II Protein Complex/chemistry , Polyamines/metabolism , Putrescine/metabolism , Putrescine/pharmacology , Scenedesmus/enzymology , Scenedesmus/growth & development , Sodium Chloride/antagonists & inhibitors
8.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1767(4): 261-71, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17395150

ABSTRACT

In the present study we aim to dissect the basis of the polyamine mode of action in the structure and function of the photosynthetic apparatus. Although the modulating effects of polyamines in photosynthesis have been reported since long [K. Kotzabasis, A role for chloroplast-associated polyamines? Bot. Acta 109 (1996) 5-7], the underlying mechanisms remained until today largely unknown. The diamine putrescine was employed in this study, by being externally added to Scenedesmus obliquus cultures acclimated to either low or high light conditions. The results revealed the high efficiency by which putrescine can alter the levels of the major photosynthetic complexes in a concerted manner inducing an overall structure and function of the photosynthetic apparatus similar to that under higher light conditions. The revealed mechanism for this phenomenon involves alterations in the level of the polyamines putrescine and spermine which are bound to the photosynthetic complexes, mainly to the LHCII oligomeric and monomeric forms. In vitro studies point out to a direct impact of the polyamines on the autoproteolytic degradation of LHCII. Concomitantly to the reduction of the LHCII size, exogenously supplied putrescine, induces the reaction centers' density and thus the photosynthetic apparatus is adjusted as if it was adapted to higher light conditions. Thus polyamines, through LHCII, play a crucial role in the regulation of the photosynthetic apparatus' photoadaptation. The protective role of polyamines on the photosynthetic apparatus under various environmental stresses is also discussed in correlation to this phenomenon.


Subject(s)
Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes/metabolism , Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism , Photosynthesis , Polyamines/metabolism , Scenedesmus/physiology , Adaptation, Physiological , Chlorophyll/metabolism , Energy Metabolism , Fluorescence , Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes/chemistry , Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes/drug effects , Photosynthesis/drug effects , Polyamines/pharmacology , Putrescine/metabolism , Putrescine/pharmacology , Scenedesmus/drug effects , Scenedesmus/enzymology
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