Issue 6, 2004

Velocity of chloroplast avoidance movement is fluence rate dependent

Abstract

In Arabidopsis leaves, chloroplast movement is fluence rate dependent. At optimal, lower light fluences, chloroplasts accumulate at the cell surface to maximize photosynthetic potential. Under high fluence rates, chloroplasts avoid incident light to escape photodamage. In this paper, we examine the phenomenon of chloroplast avoidance movement in greater detail and demonstrate a proportional relationship between fluence rate and the velocity of chloroplast avoidance. In addition we show that the amount of light-activated phototropin2, the photoreceptor for the avoidance response, likely plays a role in this phenomenon, as heterozygous mutant plants show a reduced avoidance velocity compared to that of homozygous wild type plants.

Graphical abstract: Velocity of chloroplast avoidance movement is fluence rate dependent

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Dec 2003
Accepted
10 Feb 2004
First published
27 Feb 2004

Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2004,3, 592-595

Velocity of chloroplast avoidance movement is fluence rate dependent

T. Kagawa and M. Wada, Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2004, 3, 592 DOI: 10.1039/B316285K

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