AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers have identified structural reorganizations in chlorophyll light-harvesting complexes (LHCII) and thylakoid membranes due to thermal changes.
  • The study investigates how temperature and light intensity affect these reversible and irreversible changes, which display unusual temperature behaviors from both ambient and local thermal conditions.
  • A mathematical model effectively simulates the observed data, suggesting that these reorganizations are linearly related to light intensity and play a crucial role in how plants adapt and protect themselves from excess light.

Article Abstract

Thermo-optically induced structural reorganizations have earlier been identified in isolated LHCII, the main chlorophyll a/b light harvesting complexes of Photosystem II, and in granal thylakoid membranes [Cseh et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39: 15250-15257; Garab et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41: 15121-15129]. According to the thermo-optic mechanism, structural changes can be induced by fast, local thermal transients due to the dissipation of excess excitation energy. In this paper, we analyze the temperature and light-intensity dependencies of thermo-optically induced reversible and irreversible reorganizations in the chiral macrodomains of lamellar aggregates of isolated LHCII and of granal thylakoid membranes. We show that these structural changes exhibit non-Arrhenius type of temperature dependencies, which originate from the 'combination' of the ambient temperature and the local thermal transient. The experimental data can satisfactorily be simulated with the aid of a simple mathematical model based on the thermo-optic effect. The model also predicts, in good accordance with experimental data published earlier and presented in this paper, that the reorganizations depend linearly on the intensity of the excess light, a unique property that is probably important in light adaptation and photoprotection of plants.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11120-005-5104-1DOI Listing

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