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Flavodiiron Protein Substitutes for Cyclic Electron Flow without Competing CO 2 Assimilation in Rice.

Plant Physiology 2018 Februrary
Flavodiiron protein (FLV) mediates photoreduction of O2 to H2 O. It is conserved from cyanobacteria to gymnosperms but not in angiosperms. The introduction of a moss ( Physcomitrella patens ) FLV ( PpFLV ) gene into Arabidopsis ( Arabidopsis thaliana ) made photosystem I (PSI) resistant to fluctuating light. Here, we used the same strategy with three rice ( Oryza sativa ) genotypes. PpFLV in the wild-type rice background functioned as an efficient PSI electron sink and increased resistance to PSI photodamage under fluctuating light. The introduction of PpFLV into the PGR5 -RNAi mutant [defective in PROTON GRADIENT REGULATION5 (PGR5)-dependent cyclic electron transport around PSI, CET-PSI], the crr6 mutant [defective in chloroplast NAD(P)H-dehydrogenase-like complex (NDH)-dependent CET-PSI], and the PGR5 -RNAi crr6 double mutant (double defective in CET-PSI activity) alleviated PSI photodamage under fluctuating light. Furthermore, PpFLV substituted for the function of PGR5- and NDH-dependent CET-PSI without competing for CO2 assimilation under constant light, as there was no difference in CO2 assimilation per Rubisco content and biomass production was recovered to the wild-type level. Thus, the exogenous FLV system could act not only as a safety valve under fluctuating light, but also generate a proton motive force for balancing the ATP/NADPH production ratio during steady-state photosynthesis.

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