4.7 Article

The time course of acclimation to the stress of triose phosphate use limitation

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages 64-75

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.14476

Keywords

energy-dependent exciton quenching; photosynthetic control; Rubisco activation; thylakoid ATP synthase; triose phosphate use (TPU)

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Triose phosphate utilisation (TPU) plays a crucial role in limiting the rate of photosynthesis in plants, but it is rarely found to be limiting under ambient conditions. Research shows that TPU capacity is regulated and can adapt to different temperature and CO2 concentrations. Plants adjust other parameters related to photosynthesis to overcome the limitations imposed by TPU.
Triose phosphate utilisation (TPU) limits the maximum rate at which plants can photosynthesise. However, TPU is almost never found to be limiting photosynthesis under ambient conditions for plants. This, along with previous results showing adaptability of TPU at low temperature, suggest that TPU capacity is regulated to be just above the photosynthetic rate achievable under the prevailing conditions. A set of experiments were performed to study the adaptability of TPU capacity when plants are acclimated to elevated CO2 concentrations. Plants held at 1500 ppm CO2 were initially TPU limited. After 30 h they no longer exhibited TPU limitations but they did not elevate their TPU capacity. Instead, the maximum rates of carboxylation and electron transport declined. A timecourse of regulatory responses was established. A step increase of CO2 first caused PSI to be oxidised but after 40 s both PSI and PSII had excess electrons as a result of acceptor-side limitations. Electron flow to PSI slowed and the proton motive force increased. Eventually, non-photochemical quenching reduced electron flow sufficiently to balance the TPU limitation. Over several minutes rubisco deactivated contributing to regulation of metabolism to overcome the TPU limitation.

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