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Low ascorbic acid in the vtc-1 mutant of arabidopsis is associated with decreased growth and intracellular redistribution of the antioxidant system

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2001
Authors
Veljović-Jovanović, Sonja
Pignocchi, C
Noctor, G
Foyer, CH
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Ascorbic acid has numerous and diverse roles in plant metabolism. We have used the vtc-1 mutant of Arabidopsis, which is deficient in ascorbate biosynthesis, to investigate the role of ascorbate concentration in growth, regulation of photosynthesis, and control of the partitioning of antioxidative enyzmes. The mutant possessed 70% less ascorbate in the leaves compared with the wild type. This lesion was associated with a slight increase in total glutathione but no change in the redox state of either ascorbate or glutathione. In vtc-1, total ascorbate in the apoplast was decreased to 23% of the wild-type value. The mutant displayed much slower shoot growth than the wild type when grown in air or at high CO2 (3 mL L-1), where oxidative stress is diminished. Leaves were smaller, and shoot fresh weight and dry weight were lower in the mutant. No significant differences in the light saturation curves for CO, assimilation were found in air or at high CO2, suggesting that the effect on growth... was not due to decreased photosynthetic capacity in the mutant. Analysis of chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching revealed only a slight effect on non-photochemical energy dissipation. Hydrogen peroxide contents were similar in the leaves of the vtc-1 mutant and the wild type. Total leaf peroxidase activity was increased in the mutant and compartment-specific differences in ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity were observed. In agreement with the measurements of enzyme activity, the expression of cytosolic APX was increased, whereas that for chloroplast APX isoforms was either unchanged or slightly decreased. These data implicate ascorbate concentration in the regulation of the compartmentalization of the antioxidant system in Arabidopsis.

Source:
Plant Physiology, 2001, 127, 2, 426-435
Publisher:
  • Oxford Univ Press Inc, Cary

DOI: 10.1104/pp.127.2.426

ISSN: 0032-0889

PubMed: 11598218

WoS: 000172144500009

[ Google Scholar ]
URI
http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/65
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Veljović-Jovanović, Sonja
AU  - Pignocchi, C
AU  - Noctor, G
AU  - Foyer, CH
PY  - 2001
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/65
AB  - Ascorbic acid has numerous and diverse roles in plant metabolism. We have used the vtc-1 mutant of Arabidopsis, which is deficient in ascorbate biosynthesis, to investigate the role of ascorbate concentration in growth, regulation of photosynthesis, and control of the partitioning of antioxidative enyzmes. The mutant possessed 70% less ascorbate in the leaves compared with the wild type. This lesion was associated with a slight increase in total glutathione but no change in the redox state of either ascorbate or glutathione. In vtc-1, total ascorbate in the apoplast was decreased to 23% of the wild-type value. The mutant displayed much slower shoot growth than the wild type when grown in air or at high CO2 (3 mL L-1), where oxidative stress is diminished. Leaves were smaller, and shoot fresh weight and dry weight were lower in the mutant. No significant differences in the light saturation curves for CO, assimilation were found in air or at high CO2, suggesting that the effect on growth was not due to decreased photosynthetic capacity in the mutant. Analysis of chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching revealed only a slight effect on non-photochemical energy dissipation. Hydrogen peroxide contents were similar in the leaves of the vtc-1 mutant and the wild type. Total leaf peroxidase activity was increased in the mutant and compartment-specific differences in ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity were observed. In agreement with the measurements of enzyme activity, the expression of cytosolic APX was increased, whereas that for chloroplast APX isoforms was either unchanged or slightly decreased. These data implicate ascorbate concentration in the regulation of the compartmentalization of the antioxidant system in Arabidopsis.
PB  - Oxford Univ Press Inc, Cary
T2  - Plant Physiology
T1  - Low ascorbic acid in the vtc-1 mutant of arabidopsis is associated with decreased growth and intracellular redistribution of the antioxidant system
EP  - 435
IS  - 2
SP  - 426
VL  - 127
DO  - 10.1104/pp.127.2.426
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Veljović-Jovanović, Sonja and Pignocchi, C and Noctor, G and Foyer, CH",
year = "2001",
abstract = "Ascorbic acid has numerous and diverse roles in plant metabolism. We have used the vtc-1 mutant of Arabidopsis, which is deficient in ascorbate biosynthesis, to investigate the role of ascorbate concentration in growth, regulation of photosynthesis, and control of the partitioning of antioxidative enyzmes. The mutant possessed 70% less ascorbate in the leaves compared with the wild type. This lesion was associated with a slight increase in total glutathione but no change in the redox state of either ascorbate or glutathione. In vtc-1, total ascorbate in the apoplast was decreased to 23% of the wild-type value. The mutant displayed much slower shoot growth than the wild type when grown in air or at high CO2 (3 mL L-1), where oxidative stress is diminished. Leaves were smaller, and shoot fresh weight and dry weight were lower in the mutant. No significant differences in the light saturation curves for CO, assimilation were found in air or at high CO2, suggesting that the effect on growth was not due to decreased photosynthetic capacity in the mutant. Analysis of chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching revealed only a slight effect on non-photochemical energy dissipation. Hydrogen peroxide contents were similar in the leaves of the vtc-1 mutant and the wild type. Total leaf peroxidase activity was increased in the mutant and compartment-specific differences in ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity were observed. In agreement with the measurements of enzyme activity, the expression of cytosolic APX was increased, whereas that for chloroplast APX isoforms was either unchanged or slightly decreased. These data implicate ascorbate concentration in the regulation of the compartmentalization of the antioxidant system in Arabidopsis.",
publisher = "Oxford Univ Press Inc, Cary",
journal = "Plant Physiology",
title = "Low ascorbic acid in the vtc-1 mutant of arabidopsis is associated with decreased growth and intracellular redistribution of the antioxidant system",
pages = "435-426",
number = "2",
volume = "127",
doi = "10.1104/pp.127.2.426"
}
Veljović-Jovanović, S., Pignocchi, C., Noctor, G.,& Foyer, C.. (2001). Low ascorbic acid in the vtc-1 mutant of arabidopsis is associated with decreased growth and intracellular redistribution of the antioxidant system. in Plant Physiology
Oxford Univ Press Inc, Cary., 127(2), 426-435.
https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.127.2.426
Veljović-Jovanović S, Pignocchi C, Noctor G, Foyer C. Low ascorbic acid in the vtc-1 mutant of arabidopsis is associated with decreased growth and intracellular redistribution of the antioxidant system. in Plant Physiology. 2001;127(2):426-435.
doi:10.1104/pp.127.2.426 .
Veljović-Jovanović, Sonja, Pignocchi, C, Noctor, G, Foyer, CH, "Low ascorbic acid in the vtc-1 mutant of arabidopsis is associated with decreased growth and intracellular redistribution of the antioxidant system" in Plant Physiology, 127, no. 2 (2001):426-435,
https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.127.2.426 . .

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