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- Niyogi, Krishna KRemove Niyogi, Krishna K filter
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Plant Biology
2 Results
- Research ArticleOpen Access
The major trimeric antenna complexes serve as a site for qH-energy dissipation in plants
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 298Issue 11102519Published online: September 21, 2022- Pierrick Bru
- Collin J. Steen
- Soomin Park
- Cynthia L. Amstutz
- Emily J. Sylak-Glassman
- Lam Lam
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 0Plants and algae are faced with a conundrum: harvesting sufficient light to drive their metabolic needs while dissipating light in excess to prevent photodamage, a process known as nonphotochemical quenching. A slowly relaxing form of energy dissipation, termed qH, is critical for plants’ survival under abiotic stress; however, qH location in the photosynthetic membrane is unresolved. Here, we tested whether we could isolate subcomplexes from plants in which qH was induced that would remain in an energy-dissipative state. - Plant BiologyOpen Access
Identification of pH-sensing Sites in the Light Harvesting Complex Stress-related 3 Protein Essential for Triggering Non-photochemical Quenching in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 291Issue 14p7334–7346Published online: January 27, 2016- Matteo Ballottari
- Thuy B. Truong
- Eleonora De Re
- Erika Erickson
- Giulio R. Stella
- Graham R. Fleming
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 71Light harvesting complex stress-related 3 (LHCSR3) is the protein essential for photoprotective excess energy dissipation (non-photochemical quenching, NPQ) in the model green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Activation of NPQ requires low pH in the thylakoid lumen, which is induced in excess light conditions and sensed by lumen-exposed acidic residues. In this work we have used site-specific mutagenesis in vivo and in vitro for identification of the residues in LHCSR3 that are responsible for sensing lumen pH.