Acute Exposure to UV-B Sensitizes Cucumber, Tomato, and Arabidopsis Plants to Photooxidative Stress by Inhibiting Thermal Energy Dissipation and Antioxidant Defense (original) (raw)

2011, Journal of Radiation Research

Non-photochemical quenching/Reactive oxygen species/Ultraviolet-B/Xanthophyll cycle. To characterize a change in NPQ upon exposure to ultraviolet-B (UV-B), the xanthophyll cycledependent and-independent NPQs were compared in Cucumis sativus, Lycopersicum esculentum, and Arabidopsis thaliana leaves. The xanthophyll cycle-dependent NPQ was dramatically but reversibly suppressed by UV-B radiation. This suppression was correlated more strongly with a marked decrease in photosynthetic electron transport rather than changes in xanthophyll cycle enzymes such as violaxanthin de-epoxidase and zeaxanthin epoxidase. Accordingly, the UV-B-induced suppression of NPQ cannot be attributed to changes in expressions of VDE and ZEP. However, suppression of the xanthophyll cycledependent NPQ could only account for the 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of thylakoid membranes and the increased level of 1 O2 production, but not for the decreased levels of •O2production and H2O2 scavenging. These results suggest that a gradual reduction of H2O2 scavenging activity as well as a transient and reversible suppression of thermal energy dissipation may contribute differentially to increased photooxidative damages in cucumber, tomato, and Arabidopsis plants after acute exposure to UV-B radiation.