4.7 Article

Vitamin E protects from lipid peroxidation during winter stress in the seagrass Cymodocea nodosa

Journal

PLANTA
Volume 255, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00425-022-03825-2

Keywords

Antioxidants; Cold stress; Lipid hydroperoxides; Low temperatures; Malondialdehyde; Marine angiosperms; Tocopherols

Categories

Funding

  1. CRUE-CSIC agreement
  2. Springer Nature

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study explores the role of vitamin E in protecting seagrass leaves and rhizomes from damage under low temperature conditions. It found that adjustments in antenna size and vitamin E content help protect leaves from sustained photo-inhibitory damage and lipid peroxidation events. Rhizomes also accumulate some vitamin E and are protected from lipid peroxidation during winter. Cold stress can cause transient photo-inhibition in the photosynthetic apparatus of the seagrass.
Main conclusion Adjustments in the antenna size and alpha-tocopherol contents provide protection from sustained damage in leaves of a seagrass, while low vitamin E contents appear to be enough to protect rhizomes (which appear to be more cold tolerant than leaves). Despite low temperatures can adversely affect the proper growth and development of marine angiosperms, by, among other processes, increasing reactive oxygen species production and causing oxidative damage to lipid membranes, the role of vitamin E in seagrasses, such as Cymodocea nodosa has not been explored thus far. Here, we aimed to better understand the possible role of this chain-breaking (peroxyl radical-trapping) antioxidant in response to low temperatures, and most particularly in relation to the occurrence of photo-inhibition and lipid peroxidation. Low temperatures caused an important desiccation of leaves, but not of rhizomes, which were much more tolerant to cold stress than leaves. Cold stress during winter was associated with chlorophyll loss and transient photo-inhibition, as indicated by reversible reductions in the F-v/F-m ratio. Adjustments in pigment antenna size and vitamin E contents per unit of chlorophyll during winter may help protect the photosynthetic apparatus from sustained photo-inhibitory damage and lipid peroxidation events in leaves. Rhizomes also accumulated significant amounts of vitamin E, although to a much lesser extent than leaves, and kept protected from lipid peroxidation during winter, as indicated by malondialdehyde contents, a product from secondary lipid peroxidation. It is concluded that vitamin E can help protect both leaves and rhizomes from lipid peroxidation, although cold stress during winter can cause transient photo-inhibition of the photosynthetic apparatus, in C. nodosa.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available