Anthocyanins have long been suggested as having great potential in offering photoprotection to plants facing high light irradiance. Nonetheless, their effective ability in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus from supernumerary photons has been questioned by some authors, based upon the inexact belief that anthocyanins almost exclusively absorb green photons, which are poorly absorbed by chlorophylls. Here we focus on the blue light absorbing features of anthocyanins, a neglected issue in anthocyanin research. Anthocyanins effectively absorb blue photons: the absorbance of blue relative to green photons increases from tri- to mono-hydroxy B-ring substituted structures, reaching up to 50% of green photons absorption. We offer a comprehensive picture of the molecular events activated by low blue-light availability, extending our previous analysis in purple and green basil, which we suggest to be responsible for the "shade syndrome" displayed by cyanic leaves. While purple leaves display overexpression of genes promoting chlorophyll biosynthesis and light harvesting, in green leaves it is the genes involved in the stability/repair of photosystems that are largely overexpressed. As a corollary, this adds further support to the view of an effective photoprotective role of anthocyanins. We discuss the profound morpho-anatomical adjustments imposed by the epidermal anthocyanin shield, which reflect adjustments in light harvesting capacity under imposed shade and make complex the analysis of the photosynthetic performance of cyanic vs acyanic leaves. We offer conclusive evidence that the blue light-absorbing properties of anthocyanins are responsible for the shade nature of cyanic leaves/individuals and, as a corollary, this strongly supports the view of an effective photoprotective role of anthocyanins. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Unveiling the shade nature of cyanic leaves: a view from the "blue absorbing side" of anthocyanins / M. Landi, G. Agati, A. Fini, L. Guidi, F. Sebastiani, M. Tattini. - In: PLANT, CELL AND ENVIRONMENT. - ISSN 0140-7791. - (2020). [Epub ahead of print]

Unveiling the shade nature of cyanic leaves: a view from the "blue absorbing side" of anthocyanins

A. Fini;
2020

Abstract

Anthocyanins have long been suggested as having great potential in offering photoprotection to plants facing high light irradiance. Nonetheless, their effective ability in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus from supernumerary photons has been questioned by some authors, based upon the inexact belief that anthocyanins almost exclusively absorb green photons, which are poorly absorbed by chlorophylls. Here we focus on the blue light absorbing features of anthocyanins, a neglected issue in anthocyanin research. Anthocyanins effectively absorb blue photons: the absorbance of blue relative to green photons increases from tri- to mono-hydroxy B-ring substituted structures, reaching up to 50% of green photons absorption. We offer a comprehensive picture of the molecular events activated by low blue-light availability, extending our previous analysis in purple and green basil, which we suggest to be responsible for the "shade syndrome" displayed by cyanic leaves. While purple leaves display overexpression of genes promoting chlorophyll biosynthesis and light harvesting, in green leaves it is the genes involved in the stability/repair of photosystems that are largely overexpressed. As a corollary, this adds further support to the view of an effective photoprotective role of anthocyanins. We discuss the profound morpho-anatomical adjustments imposed by the epidermal anthocyanin shield, which reflect adjustments in light harvesting capacity under imposed shade and make complex the analysis of the photosynthetic performance of cyanic vs acyanic leaves. We offer conclusive evidence that the blue light-absorbing properties of anthocyanins are responsible for the shade nature of cyanic leaves/individuals and, as a corollary, this strongly supports the view of an effective photoprotective role of anthocyanins. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
blue light; cyanic vs acyanic leaves; epidermal anthocyanins; photoprotection; photosynthesis; red light; shade avoidance responses; transcriptomics
Settore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale e Coltivazioni Arboree
2020
9-giu-2020
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/739830
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