4.5 Article

Photosynthetic and biochemical traits change in the green-tide-forming macroalga Ulva pertusa during sporulation1

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 2, Pages 549-557

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12969

Keywords

carotenoids; chlorophyll a fluorescence; chlorophylls; green tides; oxygen evolution; sporulation; Ulva pertusa

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The physiological and biochemical changes in the green macroalga Ulva pertusa during the progression of sporulation have been characterized. The transition from the vegetative to the sporulation stage was accompanied by an increase in chlorophyll a (Chl a), chlorophyll b (Chl b), and carotenoid content, as well as an increase in DPPH scavenging and responsiveness to diphenylamine. However, oxygen evolution and maximum electron transport rate decreased. The discrepancy between photosynthetic performance and pigment content might relate to the self-shading of spores within a sporangium. Spore-forming U. pertusa thalli were low-light-adapted, due to an increase in the number of photosynthetic units. Decreased electron transport during sporulation might trigger sporulation, as for some cyanobacteria and other Ulva spp., via oxidization of the plastoquinone pool and cyclic phosphorylation, thus producing ATP to generate carbon and nitrogen skeletons required for spores. It is thus concluded that carotenoids function both in spore initiation and/or maturation and in their photoprotection.

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