AI Article Synopsis

  • Chloroplasts in plants respond to light intensity by moving towards weak light (accumulation response) and away from strong light (avoidance response), with cold temperatures triggering the avoidance response even in weak light.
  • The phototropin (phot) protein plays a key role in these responses by acting as a blue-light receptor and sensing temperature changes, with previous studies showing cold affects its biochemical activity.
  • Research on the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha indicates that cold treatment decreases the transitional light intensity needed for chloroplast movement, initiating the cold-avoidance response without increasing the amount of endogenous phot.

Article Abstract

When exposed to fluctuating light intensity, chloroplasts move towards weak light (accumulation response), and away from strong light (avoidance response). In addition, cold treatment (5°C) induces the avoidance response even under weak-light conditions (cold-avoidance response). These three responses are mediated by the phototropin (phot), which is a blue-light photoreceptor and has also been reported to act as a thermosensory protein that perceives temperature variation. Our previous report indicated that cold-induced changes in phot biochemical activity initiate the cold-avoidance response. In this study, we further explored the induction mechanism of the cold-avoidance response in the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha and examined the relationship between changes in the amount of phot and the induction of the cold-avoidance response. The switch between the accumulation and avoidance responses occurs at a so-called 'transitional' light intensity. Our physiological experiments revealed that a cold-mediated decrease in the transitional light intensity leads to the induction of the cold-avoidance response. While artificial overexpression of phot decreased the transitional light intensity as much as cold treatment did, the amount of endogenous phot was not increased by cold treatment in wild-type M. polymorpha. Taken together, these findings show that the cold-avoidance response is initiated by a cold-mediated reduction of the transitional light intensity, independent of the amount of endogenous phot. This study provides a clue to understanding the mechanism underlying the switch in direction of chloroplast relocation in response to light and temperature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7241815PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0233302PLOS

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