Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2826853 | Trends in Plant Science | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Light-induced damage of the photosynthetic apparatus in plants is an important phenomenon that primarily affects the photosystem II complex. Here, we propose a new model of photoinhibition in which charge recombination processes have a double-faced role: first, photodamage is induced by singlet oxygen, which is produced via interaction with the triplet reaction center chlorophyll (3P680) arising from the recombination of the charge-separated state between P680 and the pheophytin electron acceptor (3[P680+Phe−]). Second, photoprotection is provided by competition between 3[P680+Phe−] formation and direct recombination of the 1[P680+Phe−] and P680+QA− states. The efficiency of these two pathways is under control of the redox potential of the Phe and QA electron acceptors, which is utilized during adaptation to high light conditions.