TY  - JOUR
AU  - Beisel, K.G.
AU  - Jahnke, S.
AU  - Hofmann, D.
AU  - Köppchen, S.
AU  - Schurr, U.
AU  - Matsubara, S.
TI  - Continuous Turnover of Carotenes and Chlorophyll a in Mature Leaves of Arabidopsis Revealed by 14CO2 Pulse-Chase Labeling
JO  - Plant physiology
VL  - 152
SN  - 0032-0889
CY  - Rockville, Md.: Soc.
PB  - JSTOR
M1  - PreJuSER-8461
SP  - 2188  -2199
PY  - 2010
N1  - We thank Roberto Bassi and Luca Dall'Osto for kindly providing the seeds of lut5 and lut2/npq2 mutants. Valuable suggestions of Barry Osmond during the manuscript preparation are much appreciated. K. G. B. acknowledges the support for her Ph. D. thesis at the Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf.
AB  - Carotenoid turnover was investigated in mature leaves of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) by 14CO2 pulse-chase labeling under control-light (CL; 130 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)) and high-light (HL; 1,000 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)) conditions. Following a 30-min 14CO2 administration, photosynthetically fixed 14C was quickly incorporated in beta-carotene (beta-C) and chlorophyll a (Chl a) in all samples during a chase of up to 10 h. In contrast, 14C was not detected in Chl b and xanthophylls, even when steady-state amounts of the xanthophyll-cycle pigments and lutein increased markedly, presumably by de novo synthesis, in CL-grown plants under HL. Different light conditions during the chase did not affect the 14C fractions incorporated in beta-C and Chl a, whereas long-term HL acclimation significantly enhanced 14C labeling of Chl a but not beta-C. Consequently, the maximal 14C signal ratio between beta-C and Chl a was much lower in HL-grown plants (1:10) than in CL-grown plants (1:4). In lut5 mutants, containing alpha-carotene (alpha-C) together with reduced amounts of beta-C, remarkably high 14C labeling was found for alpha-C while the labeling efficiency of Chl a was similar to that of wild-type plants. The maximum 14C ratios between carotenes and Chl a were 1:2 for alpha-C:Chl a and 1:5 for beta-C:Chl a in CL-grown lut5 plants, suggesting high turnover of alpha-C. The data demonstrate continuous synthesis and degradation of carotenes and Chl a in photosynthesizing leaves and indicate distinct acclimatory responses of their turnover to changing irradiance. In addition, the results are discussed in the context of photosystem II repair cycle and D1 protein turnover.
KW  - Arabidopsis: metabolism
KW  - Carbon Radioisotopes: metabolism
KW  - Carotenoids: metabolism
KW  - Chlorophyll: metabolism
KW  - Plant Leaves: metabolism
KW  - Carbon Radioisotopes (NLM Chemicals)
KW  - Chlorophyll (NLM Chemicals)
KW  - Carotenoids (NLM Chemicals)
KW  - chlorophyll a (NLM Chemicals)
KW  - J (WoSType)
LB  - PUB:(DE-HGF)16
C6  - pmid:20118270
C2  - pmc:PMC2850008
UR  - <Go to ISI:>//WOS:000276335900036
DO  - DOI:10.1104/pp.109.151647
UR  - https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/8461
ER  -