4.7 Article

Intracellular chloroplast photorelocation in the moss Physcomitrella patens is mediated by phytochrome as well as by a blue-light receptor

Journal

PLANTA
Volume 210, Issue 6, Pages 932-937

Publisher

SPRINGER VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s004250050700

Keywords

blue light; chloroplast; photomovement; Physcomitrella (moss); phytochrome

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The light-induced intracellular relocation of chloroplasts was examined in red-light-grown protonemal cells of the moss Physcomitrella patens. When irradiated with polarized red or blue light, chloroplast distribution in the cell depended upon the direction of the electrical vector (E-vector) in both light qualities. When the E-vector was parallel to the cross-wall (i.e. perpendicular to the protonemal axis), chloroplasts accumulated along the cross-wall; however, no accumulation along the cross-wall was observed when the vector was perpendicular to it (i.e. parallel to the protonemal axis). When a part of the cell was irradiated with a microbeam of red or blue light, chloroplasts accumulated at or avoided the illumination point depending on the fluence rate used. Red light of 0.1-18 W m(-2) and blue light of 0.01-85.5 W m(-2) induced an accumulation response (low-fluence-rate response; LFR), while an avoidance response thigh-fluence-rate response; HFR) was induced by red light of 60 W m(-2) or higher and by blue light of 285 W m(-2). The red-light-induced LFR and HFR were nullified by a simultaneous background irradiation of far-red light, whereas the blue-light-induced LFR and HFR were not affected at all by this treatment. These results show, for the first time, that dichroic phytochrome, as well as the dichroic blue-light receptor, is involved in the chloroplast relocation movement in these bryophyte cells. Further, the phytochrome-mediated responses but not the blue-light responses were revealed to be lost when red-light-grown cells were cultured under white light for 2 d.

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