Abstract
AbstractFoundations of photosynthesis research have been established mainly by studying the response of plants to changing light, typically to sudden exposure to a constant light intensity after a dark acclimation or light flashes. This approach remains valid and powerful, but can be limited by requiring dark acclimation before time-domain measurements and often assumes that rate constants determining the photosynthetic response do not change between the dark- and light-acclimation.We present experimental data and mathematical models demonstrating that these limits can be overcome by measuring plant responses to sinusoidally modulated light of varying frequency. By its nature, such frequency-domain characterization is performed in light-acclimated plants with no need for prior dark acclimation. Amplitudes, phase shifts, and upper harmonic modulation extracted from the data for a wide range of frequencies can target different kinetic domains and regulatory feedbacks. The occurrence of upper harmonic modulation reflects non-linear phenomena, including photosynthetic regulation. To support these claims, we present a frequency- and time-domain response in chlorophyll fluorescence emission of the green alga Chlorella sorokiniana in the frequency range 1000 – 0.001 Hz. Based on these experimental data and numerical as well as analytical mathematical models, we propose that frequency-domain measurements can become a versatile new tool in plant sensing.One sentence summaryIt is proposed to characterize photosynthesis in the frequency domain without the need for dark adaptation and, thus, without assumptions about the dark-to-light transition.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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