4.5 Article

Chlorophyll fluorescence screening of Arabidopsis thaliana for CO2 sensitive photorespiration and photoinhibition mutants

Journal

FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 10-11, Pages 867-873

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/FP09199

Keywords

high CO2; fluorescence imaging; photosystem II; photosynthesis

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Exposure of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) photorespiration mutants to air leads to a rapid decline in the F-v/F-m chlorophyll fluorescence parameter, reflecting a decline in PSII function and an onset of photoinhibition. This paper demonstrates that chlorophyll fluorescence imaging of F-v/F-m can be used as an easy and efficient means of detecting Arabidopsis mutants that are impaired in various aspects of photorespiration. This screen was developed to be sensitive and high throughput by the use of exposure to zero CO2 conditions and the use of array grids of 1-week-old Arabidopsis seedlings as the starting material for imaging. Using this procedure, we screened similar to 25 000 chemically mutagenised M2 Arabidopsis seeds and recovered photorespiration phenotypes (reduction in F-v/F-m at low CO2) at a frequency of similar to 4 per 1000 seeds. In addition, we also recovered mutants that showed reduced F-v/F-m at high CO2. Of this group, we detected a novel 'reverse photorespiration' phenotype that showed a high CO2 dependent reduction in F-v/F-m. This chlorophyll fluorescence screening technique promises to reveal novel mutants associated with photorespiration and photoinhibition.

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