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High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction

Due to their slow movement and closure upon shade, partially closed stomata can be a substantial limitation to photosynthesis in variable light intensities. The abscisic acid deficient flacca mutant in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) displays very high stomatal conductance (g(s)). We aimed to determin...

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Autores principales: Kaiser, Elias, Morales, Alejandro, Harbinson, Jeremy, Heuvelink, Ep, Marcelis, Leo F. M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7477092/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32983206
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01317
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author Kaiser, Elias
Morales, Alejandro
Harbinson, Jeremy
Heuvelink, Ep
Marcelis, Leo F. M.
author_facet Kaiser, Elias
Morales, Alejandro
Harbinson, Jeremy
Heuvelink, Ep
Marcelis, Leo F. M.
author_sort Kaiser, Elias
collection PubMed
description Due to their slow movement and closure upon shade, partially closed stomata can be a substantial limitation to photosynthesis in variable light intensities. The abscisic acid deficient flacca mutant in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) displays very high stomatal conductance (g(s)). We aimed to determine to what extent this substantially increased g(s) affects the rate of photosynthetic induction. Steady-state and dynamic photosynthesis characteristics were measured in flacca and wildtype leaves, by the use of simultaneous gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorometry. The steady-state response of photosynthesis to CO(2), maximum quantum efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry (F(v)/F(m)), as well as mesophyll conductance to CO(2) diffusion were not significantly different between genotypes, suggesting similar photosynthetic biochemistry, photoprotective capacity, and internal CO(2) permeability. When leaves adapted to shade (50 µmol m(−2) s(−1)) at 400 µbar CO(2) partial pressure and high humidity (7 mbar leaf-to-air vapour pressure deficit, VPD) were exposed to high irradiance (1500 µmol m(−2) s(−1)), photosynthetic induction was faster in flacca compared to wildtype leaves, and this was attributable to high initial g(s) in flacca (~0.6 mol m(−2) s(−1)): in flacca, the times to reach 50 (t(50)) and 90% (t(90)) of full photosynthetic induction were 91 and 46% of wildtype values, respectively. Low humidity (15 mbar VPD) reduced g(s) and slowed down photosynthetic induction in the wildtype, while no change was observed in flacca; under low humidity, t(50) was 63% and t(90) was 36% of wildtype levels in flacca. Photosynthetic induction in low CO(2) partial pressure (200 µbar) increased g(s) in the wildtype (but not in flacca), and revealed no differences in the rate of photosynthetic induction between genotypes. Effects of higher g(s) in flacca were also visible in transients of photosystem II operating efficiency and non-photochemical quenching. Our results show that at ambient CO(2) partial pressure, wildtype g(s) is a substantial limitation to the rate of photosynthetic induction, which flacca overcomes by keeping its stomata open at all times, and it does so at the cost of reduced water use efficiency.
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spelling pubmed-74770922020-09-26 High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction Kaiser, Elias Morales, Alejandro Harbinson, Jeremy Heuvelink, Ep Marcelis, Leo F. M. Front Plant Sci Plant Science Due to their slow movement and closure upon shade, partially closed stomata can be a substantial limitation to photosynthesis in variable light intensities. The abscisic acid deficient flacca mutant in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) displays very high stomatal conductance (g(s)). We aimed to determine to what extent this substantially increased g(s) affects the rate of photosynthetic induction. Steady-state and dynamic photosynthesis characteristics were measured in flacca and wildtype leaves, by the use of simultaneous gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorometry. The steady-state response of photosynthesis to CO(2), maximum quantum efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry (F(v)/F(m)), as well as mesophyll conductance to CO(2) diffusion were not significantly different between genotypes, suggesting similar photosynthetic biochemistry, photoprotective capacity, and internal CO(2) permeability. When leaves adapted to shade (50 µmol m(−2) s(−1)) at 400 µbar CO(2) partial pressure and high humidity (7 mbar leaf-to-air vapour pressure deficit, VPD) were exposed to high irradiance (1500 µmol m(−2) s(−1)), photosynthetic induction was faster in flacca compared to wildtype leaves, and this was attributable to high initial g(s) in flacca (~0.6 mol m(−2) s(−1)): in flacca, the times to reach 50 (t(50)) and 90% (t(90)) of full photosynthetic induction were 91 and 46% of wildtype values, respectively. Low humidity (15 mbar VPD) reduced g(s) and slowed down photosynthetic induction in the wildtype, while no change was observed in flacca; under low humidity, t(50) was 63% and t(90) was 36% of wildtype levels in flacca. Photosynthetic induction in low CO(2) partial pressure (200 µbar) increased g(s) in the wildtype (but not in flacca), and revealed no differences in the rate of photosynthetic induction between genotypes. Effects of higher g(s) in flacca were also visible in transients of photosystem II operating efficiency and non-photochemical quenching. Our results show that at ambient CO(2) partial pressure, wildtype g(s) is a substantial limitation to the rate of photosynthetic induction, which flacca overcomes by keeping its stomata open at all times, and it does so at the cost of reduced water use efficiency. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7477092/ /pubmed/32983206 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01317 Text en Copyright © 2020 Kaiser, Morales, Harbinson, Heuvelink and Marcelis http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Kaiser, Elias
Morales, Alejandro
Harbinson, Jeremy
Heuvelink, Ep
Marcelis, Leo F. M.
High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction
title High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction
title_full High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction
title_fullStr High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction
title_full_unstemmed High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction
title_short High Stomatal Conductance in the Tomato Flacca Mutant Allows for Faster Photosynthetic Induction
title_sort high stomatal conductance in the tomato flacca mutant allows for faster photosynthetic induction
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7477092/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32983206
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01317
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