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Research article2006Peer reviewed

Cold acclimation of the Arabidopsis dgd1 mutant results in recovery from photosystem I-limited photosynthesis

Hendrickson, Luke; Vlčková, Alexandra; Selstam, Eva; Huner, Norman; Öquist, Gunnar; Hurry, Vaughan

Abstract

We compared the thylakoid membrane composition and photosynthetic properties of non- and cold-acclimated leaves from the dgd1 mutant (lacking > 90% of digalactosyl-diacylglycerol; DGDG) and wild type (WT) Arabidopsis thaliana. In contrast to warm grown plants, cold-acclimated dgd1 leaves recovered pigment-protein pools and photosynthetic function equivalent to WT. Surprisingly, this recovery was not correlated with an increase in DGDG. When returned to warm temperatures the severe dgd1 mutant phenotype reappeared. We conclude that the relative recovery of photosynthetic activity at 5 degrees C resulted from a temperature/lipid interaction enabling the stable assembly of PSI complexes in the thylakoid. (c) 2006 Federation of European Biochemical Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Keywords

cold acclimation; digalactosyl-diacylglycerol; lipid; monogalactosyl-diacylglycerol; phosphatidylglycerol; P700; photosynthesis; photosystem I; photosystem II

Published in

FEBS Letters
2006, Volume: 580, number: 20, pages: 4959-4968
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Botany

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.febslet.2006.07.081

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/76348