1. Proteomic insights into the photosynthetic divergence between bark and leaf chloroplasts in Salix matsudana.
- Author
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Liu, Junxiang, Sun, Chao, Zhai, Fei-Fei, Li, Zhenjian, Qian, Yongqiang, Gu, Lin, and Sun, Zhenyuan
- Subjects
BARK ,PROTEOMICS ,WILLOWS ,CHLOROPLASTS ,ELECTRON transport ,ENERGY harvesting ,PROTEIN expression - Abstract
Bark chloroplasts play important roles in carbon balancing by recycling internal stem CO
2 into assimilated carbon. The photosynthetic response of bark chloroplasts to interior stem environments has been studied recently in woody plants. However, the molecular regulatory mechanisms underlying specific characteristics of bark photosynthesis remain unclear. To address this knowledge gap, differences in the structure, photosynthetic activity and protein expression profiles between bark and leaf chloroplasts were investigated in Salix matsudana in this study. Bark chloroplasts exhibited broader and lower grana stacks and higher levels of starch relative to leaf chloroplasts. Concomitantly, decreased oxygen evolution rates and decreased saturated radiation point were observed in bark chloroplasts. Furthermore, a total of 293 differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) were identified in bark and leaf chloroplast profile comparisons. These DEPs were significantly enriched in photosynthesis-related biological processes or Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathways associated with photosynthesis. All 116 DEPs within the KEGG pathways associated with photosynthesis light reactions were downregulated in bark chloroplasts, including key proteins responsible for chlorophyll synthesis, light energy harvesting, nonphotochemical quenching, linear electron transport and photophosphorylation. Interestingly, seven upregulated proteins involved in dark reactions were identified in bark chloroplasts that comprised two kinds of malic enzymes typical of C4 -type photosynthesis. These results provide comprehensive proteomic evidence to understand the low photochemical capability of bark chloroplasts and suggest that bark chloroplasts might fix CO2 derived from malate decarboxylation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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