Signal transduction in response to excess light: getting out of the chloroplast

Plants are continually in danger of absorbing more light energy than they can use productively for their metabolism. Acclimation to environmental conditions therefore includes the development of mechanisms for dissipating or avoiding the accumulation of such excess excitation energy. Acclimation cou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current Opinion in Plant Biology 2002-02, Vol.5 (1), p.43-48
Hauptverfasser: Mullineaux, Philip, Karpinski, Stanislaw
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Plants are continually in danger of absorbing more light energy than they can use productively for their metabolism. Acclimation to environmental conditions therefore includes the development of mechanisms for dissipating or avoiding the accumulation of such excess excitation energy. Acclimation could be controlled by many signal transduction pathways that would be initiated by the perception of excess excitation energy both inside and outside the chloroplast. Recent studies in related areas provide models of how these signalling pathways could operate in acclimation to excess light. Components of photosynthetic electron transport chains, reactive oxygen species, redox-responsive protein kinases, thiol-regulated enzymes, chlorophyll precursors and chloroplast-envelope electron transport chains all have roles in these models. Recent studies provide models of how plants are able to acclimate to excess light by dissipating or avoiding the accumulation of excess excitation energy
ISSN:1369-5266
1879-0356
DOI:10.1016/S1369-5266(01)00226-6