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REVIEW New Phytol. (2000), 146, 359–388 Tansley Review No. 112 Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling C H R I S T I N E H. F O Y E R* G R A H A M N O C T O R Department of Biochemistry and Physiology, IACR-Rothamsted, Harpenden, Herts AL5 2JQ, UK Received 20 July 1999 ; accepted 7 January 2000 I. I II. P III. O 1. Oxygen ‘ poises ’ electron transport and carbon assimilation 2. The role of oxygen in ATP synthesis 3. How fast is O reduction at PSI ? # 4. Chloroplastic processing of H O # # IV. R 1. The thioredoxin system 2. Manipulating the expression of thiolregulated enzymes 3. Modifying sensitivity to thiol regulation V. P 1. The pathway and its genetic manipulation 2. Engineering plants that photorespire less ? 3. Is photorespiration important in energy dissipation ? 4. Production and processing of photorespiratory H O # # 360 360 362 362 364 364 366 368 368 369 369 369 369 371 372 5. Catalase and foliar H O levels # # 6. Catalase and non-photorespiratory H O # # generation VI. R 1. ‘ Photosynthetic ’ respiration 2. AOS in the mitochondrion 3. AOX : regulation and significance to photosynthesis VII. P 1. The need for sensors, signals and transducers 2. Signal transduction at the local level 3. Remote signalling and responses leading to acclimation of photosynthesis ? 4. Interactions between AOS, NO), and antioxidants VIII. C Acknowledgements References 374 375 376 376 376 377 378 378 378 379 380 380 381 381 373 The gradual but huge increase in atmospheric O concentration that followed the evolution of oxygenic # photosynthesis is one consequence that marks this event as one of the most significant in the earth’s history. The high redox potential of the O \water couple makes it an extremely powerful electron sink that enables energy to # be transduced in respiration. In addition to the tetravalent interconversion of O and water, there exist a plethora # of reactions that involve the partial reduction of O or photodynamic energy transfer to produce active oxygen # species (AOS). All these redox reactions have become integrated during evolution into the aerobic photosynthetic cell. This review considers photosynthesis as a whole-cell process, in which O and AOS are involved in reactions # at both photosystems, enzyme regulation in the chloroplast stroma, photorespiration, and mitochondrial electron transport in the light. In addition, oxidants and antioxidants are discussed as metabolic indicators of redox status, acting as sensors and signal molecules leading to acclimatory responses. Our aim throughout is to assess the insights gained from the application of mutagenesis and transformation techniques to studies of the role of O and # related redox components in the integrated regulation of photosynthesis. *Author for correspondence (tel j44 1582 763133 ; fax j44 1582 763010 ; e-mail christine.foyer!bbsrc.ac.uk). Abbreviations : AOS, active oxygen species ; AOX, alternative oxidase ; APX, ascorbate peroxidase ; CF -ATPase, reversible chloroplast " ATPase\ATP synthase ; DHA, dehydroascorbate ; DHAR, DHA reductase ; FBPase, fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase ; Fd, ferredoxin ; FNR, ferredoxin : NADP+ oxidoreductase ; GSH, reduced glutathione ; GSSG, oxidized glutathione ; GOGAT, glutamate synthase ; GR, glutathione reductase ; GS, glutamine synthetase ; MDHA, monodehydroascorbate ; NADP-MDH, NADP+-dependent malate dehydrogenase ; 2-OG, s-oxoglutarate ; PEPC, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase ; PQ, plastoquinone ; PSI, photosystem I ; PSII photosystem II ; Q cycle, cyclic mechanism of electron transfer involving plastoquinone and the cytochrome b f complex : RPP, ' reductive pentose phosphate ; Rubisco, RuBP carboxylase\oxygenase ; RuBP, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate ; SOD, superoxide dismutase ; Td, thioredoxin. REVIEW 360 C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor I. Light, water, CO and nutrients are the fluctuating # driving forces and substrates of photosynthesis, but O is invariant. However, oxygen is a dangerous ally # whose reactivity must be controlled if dangerous side-reactions are to be avoided. The capacity of metabolism to use light energy is constrained by the environment, which has necessitated the evolution of an integrated process of great flexibility, able to operate over a broad window of environmental conditions. At low light levels, in unstressed conditions, photosynthesis operates with maximal quantum yield but low capacity. The photosynthetic process accelerates as light intensity increases but becomes less light-efficient, eventually reaching a ceiling rate. Walker (1992) considered that genetic attempts to enhance photosynthesis should concentrate on raising this ceiling, because there is less scope for improvement in quantum yield. In field conditions, maximal photosynthetic rate (the ceiling) is frequently depressed by environmental constraints (stress). Many attempts to prevent depression of the ceiling under conditions of stress have focused on protecting photosynthesis from oxidative damage by the manipulation of enzymes involved in the detoxification of active oxygen species (AOS). The aim of these manipulations has been to control the products of the damaging side-reactions that depress photosynthesis. Glycollate oxidase Mitochondrial terminal oxidases Superoxide dismutase +0.94 V Ascorbate peroxidase O22– (H2O2) +e– –e– During photosynthesis, water is oxidized by the manganese-containing oxygen-evolving complex –0.33 V O2• – (HO2) +e– –e– II. PSI acceptors O2 +e– –e– The multiplicity of roles played by O in metab# olism is a reflection of its distinctive chemistry. Molecular oxygen is highly unusual in that its two least strongly bound electrons are unpaired and have parallel spins. This property means that groundstate O is triplet but that excitation leads to the # formation of the highly reactive singlet state. The tetravalent interconversion of O and water is a # highly specialized reaction that can be catalysed by relatively few enzymes. Oxygen chemistry dictates that reduction is preferentially univalent although some enzymes can achieve bivalent O reduction to # produce H O (Fig. 1). The AOS produced by # # partial reactions vary greatly in their reactivity but are all less stable than O or water. # This review concentrates on recent developments in the regulation of oxygenic photosynthesis. We emphasize reactions involving singlet O , reduced # intermediates such as superoxide or H O , and # # enzyme systems associated with photosynthesis that interconvert O and water. Special attention is paid # to developments made possible by mutagenesis and transformation techniques that have confirmed, extended or challenged knowledge derived from purely biochemical and biophysical studies. Catalase +0.46 V OH• + OH–(H2O) +e– –e– OH– (H2O) +2.18 V PSII Fig. 1. Interconversion of O and water, showing intermediate active oxygen species. Protonated forms of # anions are shown in parentheses. Numbers give approximate redox potentials. The redox potential (per electron) for the tetravalent interconversion of oxygen and water is approx. j0n81 V. The arrows show some of the numerous reactions involving oxygen species. The reactions shown are key processes in the photosynthetic cell ; the most important enzymes or reactants involved in these reactions are shown in boxes. The oxygen species acting as substrate in each reaction is indicated by the vertical position of the box. Oxidation of water is in green, blue shows disproportionation reactions and reactions involving net electron transfer to oxygen are in red. REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling (Wydrzynski et al., 1996) without appreciable release of the unstable partly reduced oxygen species shown in Fig. 1 (superoxide, H O and hydroxyl radical). # # Although partial water oxidation can lead to H O # # formation (Fine & Frasch, 1992), this is not a predominant reaction in physiological situations. Some AOS formation linked to PSII activity may occur on the acceptor side either through electron flow from phaeophytin or through the reduction of O by semiquinone species (Ananyev et al., 1994). # Hydroxyl radicals generated from H O in the PSII # # reaction centre have been shown to be potent inhibitors of PSII function (Tschiersch & Ohmann, 1993 ; Jakob & Heber, 1996). In addition, excess light increases the probability of formation of highly reactive singlet O , through energy transfer from # excited triplet chlorophyll to ground-state triplet O . # Photoinhibition involves the light-induced inactivation of photosynthetic electron transport (Powles, 1984 ; Osmond, 1994). The principal site of photoinhibition is the D1 reaction-centre protein of PSII. Light-induced damage to D1 is followed by its removal from the membrane and turnover of the apoprotein at a rate much more rapid than any of the other PSII proteins (Mattoo et al., 1981). For continued PSII function, excised D1 must be replaced by a new functional peptide in a process known as the repair cycle. The photoinhibition of PSI has also been demonstrated in a number of species (Havaux & Davaud, 1994 ; Terashima et al., 1994). The PSI reaction centre complex is composed of two subunits which are the products of the psaA and psaB genes. Suppression of the degradation of these subunits and protection of PSI activity are observed if photoinhibitory treatments are applied under anaerobic conditions, implicating AOS in PSI photoinhibition (Sonoike, 1996). Because the photoinhibition of PSII occurs both under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, an obligatory role for O \AOS has not been established. # Studies of the role of O are complicated by two # possible opposing effects : although active O can # directly damage proteins such as D1, O can also # alleviate photoinhibition by acting as an electron acceptor (Krause, 1994). Two types of PSII photoinhibition have been described : donor-side inhibition (Vass et al., 1992) and acceptor-side inhibition (Jegerscho$ ld & Styring, 1990). Although both types can be observed in isolated thylakoids, acceptor-side inhibition is considered to be the predominant process in physiological situations. In this scenario excessive irradiance leads to the formation within PSII of highly reactive species that inevitably generate AOS, notably singlet oxygen and the hydroxyl radical, which are capable of initiating damage to D1. Singlet oxygen, hydroxyl radical, superoxide and H O can # # be generated within PSII complexes (Richter et al., 1990 ; Jakob & Heber, 1996). Although several 361 components associated with PSII have antioxidant activity (Ananyev et al., 1994), the reactivity of singlet O and hydroxyl radicals means that avoid# ance strategies that prevent their formation are the best form of defence. The mechanisms involved in these strategies have been discussed at length recently (Foyer & Harbinson, 1999). Degradation of the D1 protein might begin with damage caused by hydroxyl radicals or singlet O but # it also involves the activation of a specific protease (Mattoo et al., 1989). Although a large body of data suggests that photoinhibition is favoured by the over-reduction of PSII electron acceptors, the results of a study of tobacco with genetically decreased cytochrome b \f indicates that this is not ' the sole factor triggering photoinhibition (Hurry et al., 1996). Oxidative degradation of thylakoid proteins and pigments probably occurs simultaneously with acclimatory responses in pigment-protein composition, signalled by changes in the redox state of key components (Pfannschmidt et al., 1999). Redox control of mRNA abundance and mRNA-binding proteins involved in D1 synthesis, and redox regulation of the expression of light-harvesting antenna proteins, have been reported (Danon & Mayfield, 1994 ; Escoubas et al., 1995 ; Maxwell et al., 1995). Hence, changes in the turnover of D1 might be a general response to changes in the redox poise of the chloroplasts (Huner et al., 1996 ; Giardi et al., 1997). As discussed in section VII, redox poise also regulates the expression of several genes coding for chloroplast proteins (Pearson et al., 1993 ; Escoubas et al., 1995 ; Henkow et al., 1996). Although the involvement of AOS in D1 damage and breakdown in vivo remains to be established, protection of the thylakoid membrane in vitro is afforded by a number of energy-quenching and antioxidant compounds. Prerequisites for survival of excessive irradiation during stress are carotenoids and α-tocopherol, which are synthesized on the inner chloroplast envelope membranes (Audran et al., 1998 ; Joyard et al., 1998). As a lipophilic scavenger of singlet O , hydroxyl radicals and lipid peroxy # radicals, the membrane-bound antioxidant α-tocopherol protects the photosynthetic pigments from oxidation (Fryer, 1992). The carotenoid pigments associated with PSII and the light-harvesting antennae quench triplet states directly and have antioxidant activity (Siefermann-Harms, 1987 ; Miller et al., 1996). The D1 protein is partly protected against the harmful effects of singlet O by # β-carotene bound to the reaction centre (Telfer et al., 1994). All carotenoids can quench triplet chlorophyll or singlet oxygen and, in so doing, are themselves converted to the triplet state. As the probability of energy transfer from triplet carotenoids to ground-state O is relatively low, singlet # O formation is minimized by this mechanism and # 362 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor the carotenoid decays to the ground state, releasing energy harmlessly as heat. Thermal dissipation by direct quenching of singlet excited chlorophyll is also possible and is manifested as non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching (Horton et al., 1996). This process also involves the carotenoid pigments that comprise the ‘ xanthophyll cycle ’ (Demmig-Adams, 1990). The direct addition of exogenous antioxidants and antioxidative enzymes in the aqueous phase offers less direct protection because these agents do not have ready access to the sites of photodamage within the lipid phase of the membrane. However, increasing the concentrations of these antioxidants can indirectly protect PSII from photoinhibition by protecting the thiol-modulated enzymes (section IV) from oxidation and inactivation, thus maintaining maximal electron transport rates, or by providing an alternative electron sink in the Mehler-peroxidase reaction, as discussed in section III. The ability to acclimate rapidly to fluctuations in irradiance is essential to minimize photodamage but relatively little is known about the acclimatory and protective processes that maintain high photosynthetic efficiency during stress. Important in limiting oxidative damage within the thylakoid membrane might be the induction of enzymes such as glutathione peroxidases (Eshdat et al., 1997 ; Mullineaux et al., 1998) and two-cysteine peroxiredoxins (Baier & Dietz, 1999) whose expression is minimal under stress-free conditions. These enzymes reduce organic peroxides to their corresponding alcohols and might be crucial in controlling chain-type reactions that follow the initiation of lipid peroxidation by singlet O or hydroxyl # radical. Intensive study has been devoted to modification of D1 by the use of mutagenetic techniques (Gleiter et al., 1992 ; Perewoska et al., 1994 ; Nixon et al., 1995 ; Minagawa et al., 1996 ; Lardans et al., 1997 ; Ma$ enpa$ a$ et al., 1998 ; Mulo et al., 1998). None of these has elucidated the role of AOS at specific sites within PSII. The presence of photodynamic pigments in an oxygen atmosphere is potentially dangerous ; chlorophyll metabolism is therefore rigorously controlled. The requirement for coordinated enzyme activities during chlorophyll synthesis has been emphasized by a study in which the activity of uroporphyrinogen II decarboxylase was decreased in tobacco by antisense technology (Mock & Grimm, 1997). Relatively minor decreases in enzyme activity were associated with a huge accumulation of the substrate and necrotic lesions whose severity was dependent on light intensity. These effects were accompanied by the induction of several components of the antioxidative system and were explained in terms of photosensitization reactions in which tetrapyrrole precursors generate AOS, in particular singlet O # (Mock & Grimm, 1997 ; Mock et al., 1998). Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to environmental change involves a battery of regulatory processes such as, in the short term, reversible protein phosphorylation and, in the longer term, changes in the saturation state and composition of thylakoid lipids, and activation of thylakoidassociated proteases (Wada et al., 1994 ; Yang et al., 1998). An important response might be the production of stress-induced proteins such as ELIPs (early light-induced proteins), which seem to function as transient pigment-binding proteins because they bind both chlorophyll and lutein (Adamska, 1997). As discussed in section VII, there is growing evidence that the perturbation of redox homeostasis and the generation of AOS are central to acclimatory processes. These species are also implicated in the activation of stromal proteases and the mechanism of degradation of proteins such as Rubisco (GarciaFerris & Moreno, 1994), but the binding of inhibitors of low molecular mass, such as carboxyarabinitol 1phosphate, prevents protein degradation when CO # assimilation is inhibited under conditions of stress (Khan et al., 1999). AOS mediate damage to proteins through direct interaction with specific amino acid residues (lysine, arginine, proline and threonine). This oxidation provides a type of ‘ tagging ’ that renders peptide chains more susceptible to protease attack and that can be measured as increased carbonyl group formation on polypeptides (Kingston-Smith & Foyer, 2000). III. 1. Oxygen ‘ poises ’ electron transport and carbon assimilation All PSI acceptors, including Fd, have sufficiently negative redox potentials to reduce O to superoxide # (Fig. 2), the primary product of the Mehler reaction (Mehler, 1951 ; Asada et al., 1974). However, it must be noted that many components associated with the thylakoid electron transport system can either have pro-oxidant or antioxidant actions, depending on the redox poise of the chloroplasts. For example, ferredoxin : NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) can act both as a pro-oxidant that generates superoxide (Goetze & Carpentier, 1994) or an antioxidant protecting PSII (Krapp et al., 1997). Similarly, O # can promote photoinhibition or protect against it, depending on the prevailing conditions (Krause, 1994). Whole-chain electron transport from water to O # is known as ‘ pseudocyclic electron flow ’. Electron flow to O at PSI prevents over-reduction of the # electron transport chain (Arnon & Chain, 1975 ; Egneus et al. 1975 ; Heber et al. 1978 ; Polle, 1996) and ‘ poises ’ the electron carriers for more efficient functioning (Heber et al., 1978 ; Ziem-Hanck & REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling 363 –0.5 Fdox /Fdred 1 –0.4 3 2 •– O2 /O2 NADP+/NADPH 5 –0.3 ESS /ESH Redox potential (V) Tdox / Tdred 4 GSSG / GSH –0.2 6 –0.1 Dehydroascorbate / ascorbate 0 Fig. 2. Stromal redox couples important in oxygen processing in the chloroplast. The vertical position indicates approximate redox potential, also indicated by the deepness of blue. The redox potential span of thiol\disulphide couples on thiol-regulated enzymes is a likely mean value. This redox potential can vary significantly between target enzymes (see the text, section IV(1)). The sizes of the ellipses represent the approximate relative pool sizes. Red arrows denote the direction of net electron flow in important redox reactions discussed in the text. These are : 1, superoxide generation via reduction of O by Fd (primary PSI # acceptors, which have lower redox potentials than Fd, are also able to reduce O to superoxide (O )−)) ; 2, # # thioredoxin (Td) reduction, catalysed by ferredoxin : thioredoxin reductase ; 3, NADPH formation, catalysed by ferredoxin : NADP+ oxidoreductase ; 4, reduction of glutathione, catalysed by glutathione reductase ; 5, activation of stromal enzymes by reduced Td ; 6, ascorbate regeneration from dehydroascorbate, occurring chemically or catalysed by dehydroascorbate reductase. ESH\ESS, thiol-modulated enzymes ; Fd, ferredoxin ; GSH, reduced glutathione ; GSSG, oxidized glutathione. Heber, 1980 ; Levings & Siedow, 1995). The chloroplast stroma remains largely oxidized at high irradiance, even at the CO compensation point # (Harbinson & Foyer, 1991). In these circumstances electron drainage to O might serve three functions : # (1) to provide the appropriate redox poise necessary for cyclic electron flow, (2) to keep the stromal redox state relatively oxidized, and (3) to maintain the trans-thylakoid ∆pH to allow dissipative processes in the thylakoid membrane to continue (Harbinson & Foyer, 1991). The hypothesis that electron flow to O is # increased when the NADP+ pool is depleted is widely accepted, but very little evidence supports this view because the coupled regulation of electron transport rates prevents NADP+ depletion even in the absence of CO (Takahama et al., 1981). As the # light incident on a leaf is increased, the primary electron donor of PSI, P , becomes progressively (!! more oxidized (Harbinson & Foyer, 1991). This occurs because the rate-limiting step of electron transport, the oxidation of PQ by the cytochrome b \f complex, lies between PSII and PSI (Haehnel, ' 1984). The oxidation of PQ involves the release of protons into the thylakoid lumen. The progressive inhibition of this reaction as the lumen pH decreases in the light (Hope et al., 1994) limits the rate of electron transport between the photosystems, a phenomenon that is known as ‘ photosynthetic control ’ (Foyer et al., 1990). It is unknown whether such control of the redox state of the PQ pool is responsive to the redox poise of PSI electron acceptors such as Fd. However, both Fd and superoxide can transfer electrons back to the cytochrome b \f complex, either through ferredoxin : ' plastoquinone oxidoreductase activity or, for superoxide, via plastocyanin (Takahashi & Asada, 1988 ; Hormann et al., 1993 ; Asada, 1994 ; Bendall & Manasse, 1995). In addition, the thylakoid membrane contains complexes that are analogous to the mitochondrial complex I and which might be involved in redox-poising PSI electron transport in a process termed ‘ chlororespiration ’ (Bennoun, 1982). Multiple systems of control match the supply of electrons to PSI with the rate of Fd oxidation such that NADP+ availability rarely limits electron transport. The activities of the two photosystems are coordinated so that the rate of electron flow to PSI increases only when electron flow away from PSI is increased. Most of the electrons from PSI are passed to NADP+ from Fd via FNR, but the Fd pool also acts as a feed-forward regulator of the thiol- 364 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor modulated enzymes of the reductive pentose phosphate (RPP) pathway through thioredoxin (Td) (Fig. 2). 2. The role of oxygen in ATP synthesis The trans-thylakoid ∆pH has a central role in photosynthesis. It drives ATP synthesis, is involved in the regulation of stromal enzyme activities (Leegood et al., 1985) and, as already discussed, regulates electron flow by affecting both PSII photochemical efficiency and the rate of plastoquinol oxidation. The ∆pH has to be low enough to allow Fd reduction to continue but high enough to support energy dissipation and ATP synthesis. According to our current understanding, any whole-chain electron transport pathway should be coupled to ATP synthesis. This has been experimentally demonstrated for O reduction and # associated reactions (Egneus et al., 1975), which yield ATP : 2e− ratios that are not much lower than those observed during the reduction of NADP+ (Furbank & Badger, 1983 ; Forti & Elli, 1995). This suggests that photosynthetic control must check O # reduction in the same way as it averts over-reduction of the NADP+ pool, by preventing excessive reduction of PSI (Foyer & Harbinson, 1999). Discussion of the relationship between the ∆pH and interacting processes is still clouded by uncertainty over the precise nature of the proton gradients involved ; that is, whether they are predominantly ‘ bulk-phase ’ in nature or are more localized. For example, it is possible that protons derived from water-splitting and those produced at the cytochrome b \f complex are not kinetically ' equivalent in terms of their activity in ATP synthesis, or that proton gradients driving ATP synthesis and ensuring photosynthetic control are not in equilibrium (Laasch & Weis, 1988). These possibilities complicate the interpretation of experimental results. One factor alleviating photosynthetic control during the Mehler-peroxidase cycle could be the consumption of intrathylakoidal protons that might accompany O reduction, proposed to explain the # low pH optimum observed for O uptake (Hormann # et al., 1993). Proton deposition inside the thylakoid during NADP+ reduction can be represented as follows : H OjNADP+j3H+ (stroma) # 4 "O jNADPHj4H+ (lumen) # # (no protonmotive Q cycle) H OjNADP+j5H+ (stroma) # 4 "O jNADPHj6H+ (lumen) # # (obligatory protonmotive Q cycle) Because O reduction occurs predominantly on the # acceptor side of PSI, similar proton stoichiometries should also hold during pseudocyclic electron transport. However, if superoxide is protonated inside the thylakoid but dismutated in a phase energetically continuous with the stroma, 2O j2e− 4 2O )− # # (superoxide formation) 2O )−j2H+ (lumen) 4 2HO # # (superoxide protonation) 2HO 4 H O (stroma)jO # # # # (superoxide dismutation) Such a phenomenon would mean that, of the protons deposited during electron transfer, between 50% (no Q cycle) and 33% (Q cycle) would flow back to the stroma through a route that does not involve ATP synthesis. In the steady state, however, two electrons are also required to reduce H O to water (Fig. 3). # # Electron transfer to H O should support the luminal # # deposition of the same number of protons as electron transfer to NADP+, so that the proportion of protons dissipated via superoxide protonation during steadystate reduction of O would be approx. 25% (no Q # cycle) or 17% (Q cycle). Backflow of protons through superoxide protonation on the interior of the thylakoid, if it occurred, would therefore be significant but nevertheless unlikely to remove photosynthetic control completely, although it could contribute to the small discrepancy between ATP : 2e− ratios observed in spinach thylakoids reducing O and NADP+ (Furbank & Badger, 1983). # 3. How fast is O reduction at PSI ? # It is widely accepted that the Mehler reaction acts as an alternative sink for electrons. Oxygen reduction is tightly coupled to the production and destruction of H O by ascorbate peroxidase (APX) (Fig. 3) # # (Groden & Beck, 1979 ; Anderson et al., 1983a) in the Mehler-peroxidase cycle (Neubauer & Schreiber, 1989 ; Neubauer & Yamamoto, 1992). This consists of four reactions occurring at the surface of the membrane in the region of PSI (Fig. 3a) : (1) electron transfer from water to O , producing superoxide ; (2) # dismutation of the superoxide radical catalysed by a membrane-bound superoxide dismutase (SOD) isoform, producing H O ; (3) reduction of H O to # # # # water by APX ; and (4) the regeneration of ascorbate from monodehydroascorbate (MDHA) (Miyake & Asada, 1992 ; Grace et al., 1995). MDHA is a powerful electron acceptor that oxidizes reduced Fd (Miyake & Asada, 1994). On the thylakoid membrane these reactions constitute a closed thylakoidbound scavenging system acting within a 5–10 nm layer on the surface of the membrane (Miyake & Asada, 1994 ; Asada, 1996). The addition of H O to # # thylakoid membranes or to isolated intact chloroplasts causes a rapid increase in the photochemical REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling H2O (a) H2O (b ) H2O (c ) MDHA MDHA MDHA APX APX APX AA AA H2O2 365 AA MDHAR H2O2 H2O2 DHA DHAR GSSG SOD SOD O2• – O2 NADP+ O2• – O2 NADPH SOD O2• – GR NADPH O2 Fd Fd PSI PSI FNR GSH NADP+ Stroma Fd FNR PSI Intrathylakoid space Fig. 3. Oxygen reduction at PSI and processing of chloroplastic H O . The predominant path producing H O # # # # from O is denoted by red arrows. The initiating reaction of the reduction of O to water involves the generation # # − of superoxide (O ) ) by Fd or other PSI acceptors. Membrane-associated and soluble superoxide dismutase # (SOD) catalyse the conversion of superoxide to H O (superoxide can also be reduced to H O by PSI # # # # acceptors). H O is reduced to water through the action of ascorbate peroxidase (APX), found in both # # thylakoid-bound and stromal forms. The blue arrows show three distinct paths of ascorbate (AA) regeneration. (a) The Mehler-peroxidase cycle, a sequence closely associated with the thylakoid membrane in which the primary product of ascorbate peroxidation, monodehydroascorbate (MDHA), is photochemically reduced to ascorbate by Fd. SOD and APX are in coloured ellipses to indicate association with the thylakoid membrane. (b) Regeneration of ascorbate from MDHA by the NADPH-dependent enzyme MDHA reductase (MDHAR). (c) Regeneration of ascorbate via the ascorbate–glutathione cycle. Dehydroascorbate (DHA) is formed from MDHA by spontaneous dismutation, and is reduced by reduced glutathione (GSH), a reaction catalysed by DHA reductase (DHAR). Oxidized glutathione (GSSG) is reduced to GSH by glutathione reductase (GR), at the expense of NADPH. In (b) and (c), enzymes are in white ellipses to denote location primarily in the soluble phase. Reactions are not shown stoichiometrically : whichever pathways operate, the net reduction of one molecule of O to two water molecules requires four electrons from the photosynthetic electron transport chain # and supports the generation of a trans-thylakoid pH gradient. FNR, ferredoxin : NADP+ oxidoreductase. component of chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching, supporting the conclusion that H O generation and # # degradation act as alternative electron sinks that maintain the oxidized state of the primary stable PSII electron acceptor, QA (Neubauer & Schreiber, 1989 ; Foyer et al., 1994). The Mehler-peroxidase cycle performs an essential protective function in preventing the accumulation of superoxide and H O that could # # otherwise lead to hydroxyl radical formation. In cyanobacteria, the absence of one component, SOD, provokes photoinhibition (Herbert et al., 1992). Enhanced protection of PSII has been shown in transformed plants with increased chloroplastic SOD activity (Arisi et al., 1998). Overexpression of Fe-SOD altered the regulation of photosynthesis at low partial pressures of CO , indicating that the # Mehler reaction can prevent QA over-reduction under conditions that cause a decline in intercellular CO concentration, which might be relevant to # physiological conditions that result in stomatal closure. These observations are somewhat surprising because the dismutation of superoxide is not con- sidered to be a major factor limiting the overall flux through the pathway. However, with only one exception, overexpression of any of the SOD isoforms has been repeatedly shown to enhance the protection of photosynthesis and leaf metabolism against oxidative damage (reviewed by Foyer, 1997). The extent to which O can be used to sustain high # rates of electron transport requires careful consideration because the contribution of pseudocyclic electron flow to ATP synthesis means that ATP must be consumed at a rate commensurate with its production to ensure continued electron flux through the chain. In Scenedesmus, however, electron transport rates are similar regardless of whether CO or # O is used as an electron acceptor, even at saturating # light intensities (Radmer & Kok, 1976). This implies either a lack of photosynthetic control in these organisms or the existence of an unidentified ATP sink able to regenerate ADP and phosphate consumed during O reduction. In certain algae, the # relative insensitivity of thiol-regulated photosynthetic enzymes (see section IV) permits the accumulation of H O and its excretion into the # # 366 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor surrounding medium. The excretion of H O might # # partly explain the high rates of O reduction, because # this would allow comparable rates of O uptake to be # sustained by electron transport rates only half as fast as those necessary to reduce O to water via the paths # shown in Fig. 3. However, as pointed out previously, an ATP sink or uncoupling mechanism has to be invoked to support rates of O reduction that are # comparable to rates of CO fixation (Radmer & Kok, # 1976). In leaves, numerous studies with chlorophyll fluorescence analysis have shown that electron flow is largely non-cyclic over a wide range of irradiances and that donor-side limitation of PSI predominates, because the primary site of control over thylakoid electron transport resides between PSII and PSI (Foyer et al., 1992). This implies that, even if it occurs at the high rates that have been suggested (Osmond & Grace, 1995), O reduction is con# strained by the proton gradient, as discussed in the previous section. Precise estimates of Mehler flux are difficult to obtain because there is no direct method of measurement. Likely values for flux through the Mehlerperoxidase cycle in planta are not known and estimated rates vary enormously (Marsho et al., 1979 ; Steiger & Beck, 1981 ; Badger, 1985 ; Robinson, 1988). Mass spectrometric measurements are complicated by concomitant O uptake in # photorespiration and mitochondrial respiration (sections V and VI). The use of metabolic inhibitors or high [CO ] to remove these processes is not # without problems. Inhibitors might lead either to an underestimation of the Mehler reaction (because of the removal of ATP-consuming reactions) or, possibly, an overestimation (because of the absence of NADP+ regeneration). Similarly, effects of high [CO ] on either stromal redox state or adenylate # status might mean that estimates of the Mehler reaction under these conditions do not necessarily reflect rates that occur in air. Although it is often considered that the Mehler reaction is unaffected when photorespiration is minimized by low O , it is # worth noting that half-maximal rates of O reduction # are obtained at O concentrations varying from 2 to # 60 µM (Robinson, 1988) which corresponds to an atmospheric concentration of approx. 0n15–5% O at # 25mC. In many cases, concentrations of CO intended to # eliminate photorespiration have probably not been sufficiently high, and it is likely that ongoing lightdependent O uptake at these ‘ high ’ CO concen# # trations mainly reflects continuing photorespiration (Canvin et al., 1980 ; Osmond & Grace, 1995). A complementary approach has exploited transformed plants with greatly decreased Rubisco activities (Ruuska et al., 2000). These plants have lowered capacities for CO fixation and photorespiration but # their capacity for electron transport is much less affected. As predicted from considerations of photosynthetic control, electron transport to O (pseudo# cyclic electron flow) was modified in parallel with overall non-cyclic electron flow, confirming the notion that significant electron flow to O is possible # only in the presence of an ATP sink. The Mehler reaction is therefore unable to replace CO as# similation and photorespiration as a sink for electrons (Ruuska et al., 2000). Rates of electron transport to O might increase transiently during light flecks, # when rapid adjustment of regulation between the processes of electron transport and CO assimilation # is required (Pearcy, 1990). This situation is analogous to the induction period of photosynthesis (Marsho et al., 1979 ; Foyer et al., 1992). Although it has frequently been considered that high light intensities promote higher rates of O reduction # (Canvin et al., 1980 ; Badger, 1985 ; Grace & Logan, 1996), it has also been suggested that O reduction # accounts for a greater proportion of electron flow at low light intensities (Heber et al., 1978). If electrons do leak to O at a fixed proportion of overall electron # transport rates, then absolute rates of O reduction # will obviously increase with light intensity but will not increase further at light intensities above those saturating for photosynthesis (see an analogous discussion of photorespiration in section V(3)). Lastly, it can be noted that abundant data from chlorophyll fluorescence analysis argue against a high proportion of electrons flowing to O in vivo # (Genty et al., 1989 ; Harbinson et al., 1990 ; Cornic & Briantais, 1991). These considerations suggest that electron transport rates to O are very low or that they are # proportional to the requirement for additional ATP production. The physiological relevance of steadystate estimates of the rate of electron flow to O # might be virtually meaningless because pseudocyclic electron flow will switch on and off according to energy and ATP requirements. At any point it might be lower or higher than the value of 10% of the total electron transport rate that is often discussed (Egneus et al., 1975 ; Gerbaud & Andre, 1980 ; Robinson, 1988 ; Tourneux & Peltier, 1995). A photoprotective role for the Mehler reaction in preventing photoinhibition cannot be discounted, notably because pseudocyclic electron flow increases the trans-thylakoid pH gradient and promotes energy dissipation (Osmond & Grace, 1995 ; Biehler & Fock, 1996 ; Lovelock & Winter, 1996). In theory, in the absence of a corresponding ATP sink, this could be achieved by relatively low rates of electron transport (Noctor & Foyer, 2000). 4. Chloroplastic processing of H O # # The principal H O -scavenging enzymes in leaves # # are APX and catalase (Groden & Beck, 1979 ; Kelly & Latzko, 1979 ; Willekens et al., 1995). The modes REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling of action of these two enzymes are essentially different. Catalases catalyse the dismutation of two molecules of H O to water and molecular O at near # # # diffusion-controlled rates, whereas peroxidases use substrates to reduce H O to water. APX has a much # # higher affinity for H O than catalase but catalase has # # a much higher Vmax (Asada, 1992). Peroxisomal APX might prevent catalase inactivation that can occur at low concentrations of H O . As discussed in # # section V, the CAT-1 isoform has a major role in H O scavenging during photorespiration. # # Analysis of gene sequences in Arabidopsis suggests the existence of up to seven APX isoforms, two soluble in the cytosol and three associated with microbodies, as well as the two chloroplastic isoforms (Jespersen et al., 1997). The significance of chloroplastic APX, which is highly active and shows a high specificity for ascorbate as reductant, might reside in the need to keep stromal H O levels low, to # # protect the thiol-regulated enzymes. Such a role requires the rapid regeneration of reduced ascorbate, to sustain its antioxidative function, and this can occur via several pathways (Fig. 3). At neutral pH values, the primary product of ascorbate peroxidation, MDHA, has a short lifetime : if not rapidly reduced via the paths shown in Fig. 3a,b, it will disproportionate spontaneously to ascorbate and the oxidized form, dehydroascorbate (DHA), at a rate similar to that observed for the disproportionation of superoxide (Bielski et al., 1971). Ascorbate must then be regenerated from DHA (Fig. 3c). The paths shown in Fig. 3b,c will be important in scavenging H O that escapes the thylakoid# # associated Mehler-peroxidase cycle. Equally, these stromal reactions could act to scavenge H O # # entering the chloroplasts from the cytosol. As the peroxide anion exists almost entirely in the uncharged form (H O ) at physiological pH, it can # # diffuse freely through biological membranes. Indeed, chloroplasts are capable of rapidly detoxifying H O of external origin (Nakano & Asada, 1980 ; # # Anderson et al., 1983a). It seems that catalase and APX act cooperatively to remove H O in leaves, # # ensuring maximal H O destruction at a minimal # # cost in terms of reducing power (for related discussion, see section V(6)). In some species, however, this simple picture can be complicated by intercellular compartmentation. For instance, maize shows pronounced sensitivity to oxidative damage induced by exposure to low temperature. It has been proposed that this might be partly due to the differential compartmentation of antioxidants in maize leaves, which necessitates the transport of reduced forms of ascorbate and glutathione from the mesophyll to the bundle sheath cells, processes that are slowed at low temperatures (Doulis et al., 1997). This hypothesis receives support from the observation that bundle sheath proteins are much more susceptible to oxidative damage than those of 367 the mesophyll (Kingston-Smith & Foyer, 2000), suggesting that stress conditions provoke a deficit in antioxidant capacity in the bundle sheath. Although Fig. 3c shows DHA reduction occurring enzymically, it should be noted that DHA reductase (DHAR) activity is frequently undetectable in chloroplasts (Foyer & Halliwell, 1976 ; Morell et al., 1997). Non-enzymic reduction of DHA by reduced glutathione (GSH) is, however, increased at alkaline pH values, such as those occurring in the illuminated stroma (Foyer & Halliwell, 1976). Although DHA is always found in leaves and other plant tissues (Foyer et al., 1983 ; Robinson, 1997), it is possible that it does not accumulate in chloroplasts (Morell et al., 1997). One observation that provides some evidence against this idea has come from transformed poplars overexpressing glutathione reductase (GR) (Foyer et al., 1995). These plants have increased ascorbate levels, suggesting that glutathione is important in ascorbate regeneration via DHA reduction. Furthermore, it has been experimentally demonstrated that chloroplasts are capable of sustaining ascorbate regeneration from DHA : the addition of DHA drives turnover of the NADPH pool and leads to the evolution of O by the photosynthetic electron # transport system (Anderson et al., 1983b). When H O is added to isolated chloroplasts, glutathione # # and ascorbate pools show significant turnover, suggesting that both antioxidants contribute to H O # # detoxification (Anderson et al., 1983a, b). Interestingly, decreased electron transport resulting from photoinhibition leads to the inactivation of thiolmodulated enzymes such as NADP+-dependent malate dehydrogenase (NADP-MDH) and fructose1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), yet the ascorbate and glutathione pools remain reduced (Dujardyn & Foyer, 1989 ; Foyer et al., 1989). These observations might reflect the relative redox potentials of each component (Fig. 2) and indicate that, under photoinhibitory conditions, electrons are partitioned to stromal antioxidant pools in preference to carbon assimilation. Several studies have found that GR shows the lowest extractable activity of the enzymes of the ascorbate–glutathione cycle. For example, APX activity is often 10–20 times that of GR (Gillham & Dodge, 1986), although it can be noted that APX activity is typically measured at 0n1 mM H O , # # which is probably 10–100-fold higher than the stromal concentration in vivo. It is conceivable that GR activity might limit flux through the ascorbate– glutathione cycle under certain conditions, explaining why the overexpression of this enzyme leads to a more reduced glutathione pool and resistance to photoinhibition, as well as increases in total glutathione and ascorbate contents (Foyer et al., 1995). By contrast, the activities of GR (and DHAR) might not need to be as high as that of APX because the former enzymes participate in only one of the possible paths 368 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor for ascorbate regeneration (Fig. 3c) and additional mechanisms are able to regenerate ascorbate from MDHA (Fig. 3a,b). Because ascorbate is produced in the mitochondria and glutathione is synthesized in the chloroplasts and cytosol (Noctor & Foyer, 1998a), it is possible that the capacity of the ascorbate–glutathione cycle is limited by the transport of these antioxidants across the chloroplast envelope. Clarification of this question requires more knowledge of the likely rates of antioxidant degradation in the illuminated chloroplast. Virtually no information is available on these important steps of transport and turnover. IV. 1. The thioredoxin system Several stromal enzymes are light-regulated via the Td system, which transfers reducing equivalents from PSI, via Fd, ferredoxin : thioredoxin reductase and Td, to disulphide bridges on target enzymes (Fig. 4) (Buchanan, 1991). Td is a small protein (approx. 12 kDa) of which three types have been found in plants (Tdm, Tdf and Tdh). Chloroplastic target enzymes are reduced by Tdf, Tdm, or both (Buchanan, 1991). The list of enzymes subject to this regulation is ever-growing : recent evidence suggests that Td functions to activate acetyl-CoA carboxylase, which catalyses the first committed step in the synthesis of fatty acids (Sasaki et al., 1997), and also the regulatory protein Rubisco activase (Zhang & Portis, 1999). Intrathylakoid space The control of many of the thiol-regulated enzymes is complex, with reductive activation itself and the significance of reduction both depending on the concentrations of substrates and\or co-factors (reviewed by Leegood et al., 1985, Scheibe, 1987 and Buchanan, 1991). Interestingly, it has been shown that two of the thiol-regulated enzymes of the RPP pathway, phosphoribulokinase and glyceraldehyde3-phosphate dehydrogenase, might also be regulated by another small protein, termed CP12 (Wedel & Soll, 1998). When simultaneously bound to this protein, the enzymes are inactive. They become active when dissociated, a process mediated by NADPH (Wedel & Soll, 1998). It is generally considered that the predominant function of the Td system is to enable active assimilatory metabolism in the light while preventing futile cycling of metabolites and ATP hydrolysis in the dark. Dark inactivation is probably due to autooxidation of thiol groups on Td and target enzymes in the absence of ongoing reduction (Leegood & Walker, 1982 ; Jacquot et al., 1984). Oxidation is mediated either by O or by H O (Fig. 4). Because # # # oxidative species are formed at higher rates in the light than in the dark, continuous reduction of the target enzymes is necessary to maintain active states. The reduction state of enzymes in the illuminated leaf therefore reflects the balance between oxidative and reductive fluxes, enabling plastic regulation of enzyme activation state (Leegood & Walker, 1982 ; Leegood et al., 1985). One exception is probably the membrane-bound CF -ATPase, which is activated " at much lower electron pressures than the soluble thiol-regulated enzymes (Quick & Mills, 1986 ; Enzyme more active in oxidized form: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase Stroma hv FTR S FeS S SH Td SH Target enzyme (oxidized form) S 2 O2• – S H2O Photosystem I Ferredoxin e– Fes FTR FeS hv SH SH S Td S Target enzyme (reduced form) SH SH H2O2 2 O2 Enzymes more active in reduced form: NADP-malate dehydrogenase Fructose-1, 6-bisphosphatase Sedoheptulose-1, 7-bisphosphatase Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase Phosphoribulokinase CF1-ATPase Acetyl CoA carboxylase Fig. 4. Reduction of chloroplastic enzymes by the ferredoxin–thioredoxin system. Oxidation of enzymes can occur, as shown, through direct oxidation of enzyme thiol groups by molecular oxygen or H O : these species # # can also oxidize the redox-active thiols of thioredoxin (Td), which can in turn oxidize target enzymes through a reversal of the reducing process. The ultimate product of O reduction by thiol groups is water. The list of # target enzymes is not intended to be exhaustive. FTR, ferredoxin : thioredoxin reductase ; O )−, superoxide. # REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling Kramer et al., 1990) and is much more resistant to oxidation in the light (Noctor & Mills, 1988). It has become clear that, even among the soluble enzymes regulated by the Td system, there might be considerable heterogeneity in enzyme activation state under given conditions owing to significant divergence in the redox potentials of the key thiols\ disulphides between target enzymes (D. Ort, pers. comm.). H O is a potent oxidant of enzyme thiol groups ; # # its inhibitory effect on CO fixation is due to the # inactivation of thiol-regulated enzymes (Kaiser, 1979 ; Charles & Halliwell, 1980). Reported total foliar concentrations of H O (100–300 µM) (Rao et # # al., 1997 ; Dat et al., 1998) often exceed those required to inhibit photosynthesis in isolated chloroplasts through oxidation of the thiol-regulated enzymes (Kaiser, 1979 ; Charles & Halliwell, 1980). The chloroplastic H O concentration is maintained # # much lower than these total tissue levels (Polle, 1997), principally by chloroplastic APX. Some contribution of peroxisomal catalase to control of the stromal H O level cannot be completely excluded # # (for related discussion see section V(6)). In addition to H O , DHA and oxidized gluta# # thione (GSSG) are able to inactivate thiol-regulated enzymes (Wolosiuk & Buchanan, 1977 ; Morell et al., 1997). In the illuminated chloroplast, therefore, as well as flux from PSI to H O , DHA and GSSG via # # the Mehler-peroxidase and ascorbate–glutathione cycles, some flux must also occur via thiol groups on Td and Td-reduced enzymes. This view emphasizes the plurality of routes through which electrons can be transferred from water cleaved at PSII to AOS and antioxidant pools. Electron transfer from Td to peroxides might also be possible via the activity of chloroplastic 2-cysteine peroxiredoxins (Baier & Dietz, 1999), although the precise nature of the reductant used by these enzymes is not yet clear. 2. Manipulating the expression of thiol-regulated enzymes The sensitivity of CO fixation in higher plants to # H O (Kaiser, 1979) demonstrates the need for # # reductive activation of the thiol-regulated enzymes of the RPP pathway during photosynthesis. Because three enzymes of the pathway (FBPase, sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase and phosphoribulokinase) catalyse reactions that are irreversible under physiological conditions, they have often been considered as potential rate-limiting points in CO # fixation (Buchanan, 1991). Little support for stringent control by individual enzymes has come from studies with anti-sense technology : CO fixation is # affected only when total enzyme capacity is markedly decreased (Kossmann et al., 1994 ; Paul et al., 1995 ; Price et al., 1995 ; Harrison et al., 1998). However, the effect of decreases in enzyme amounts might be 369 countered by compensatory increases in the activation state of the remaining enzyme pool, as observed for phosphoribulokinase (Banks et al., 1999). Similar effects were observed in plants transformed for another thiol-regulated enzyme, NADP-MDH. In this case, decreased maximal capacities were associated with a more active pool of enzymes in vivo, whereas the reduction state of NADP-MDH was lower in plants overexpressing the enzyme (Trevanion et al., 1997 ; Backhausen et al., 1998). Anti-sense studies have highlighted the ability of the RPP pathway to operate at similar rates at different internal substrate concentrations, so that decreased activities of one enzyme can perturb metabolite pools significantly without affecting overall rates of CO fixation (Price et al., 1995). # 3. Modifying sensitivity to thiol regulation In addition to manipulation of the expression of native enzymes, site-directed mutagenesis is a powerful tool for elucidating the control of thiol reduction and its significance in foliar metabolism. A chloroplastic FBPase coding sequence has been modified by the selective mutation of cysteine residues to serine : the loss of one of the cysteine residues yielded an enzyme that was constitutively active when expressed in Escherichia coli (Jacquot et al., 1997). A similar approach for NADP-MDH showed that the regulatory properties of the enzyme could be markedly modified, but also revealed that the reduction of more than one disulphide bridge was necessary for activation (Issakidis et al., 1992). Considerable insight into the significance of light– dark regulation by the Td system might come from studies in which constitutively active enzymes are introduced into plants (for further discussion, see Miginiac-Maslow et al., 1997). V . 1. The pathway and its genetic manipulation The term photorespiration describes the lightdependent uptake of O and the associated release of # CO . The initiating reaction of photorespiration is # the oxygenation of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) at Rubisco, yielding 3-phosphoglycerate and 2-phosphoglycollate. Approximately 75% of the carbon entering 2-phosphoglycollate is recycled to 3phosphoglycerate through a complex series of reactions involving enzymes localized in the chloroplasts, peroxisomes and mitochondria (Berry et al., 1978). These reactions, which represent the major metabolic fate of glycollate carbon, together constitute the ‘ photorespiratory pathway ’ (Fig. 5). In addition to enzymes directly involved in carbon recycling, other enzymes have important roles in 370 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor H2O Chloroplast O2 RuBP O2 2-Phosphoglycollate H2O2 2 1 Glyoxylate Glycollate Hydroxypyruvate Rubisco 6 7 8 PGA Glycerate Serine Glutamate NH3 5 NH3 Glutamine 2-OG GOGAT Glutamate Glutamate 4 3 2-OG Glycine Glycine Serine GS Peroxisome Catalase GDC CO2 Mitochondrion Cytosol Fig. 5. The principal features of photorespiratory metabolism. Solid arrows show metabolic conversions, dotted arrows show movement between compartments. Blue arrows show reactions involved in carbon recycling, green arrows reactions involved in amino cycling, and red arrows reactions involving the production and processing of H O . Key enzymes discussed in the text are in white ellipses. Other reactions (numbered) # # are catalysed by phosphoglycollate phosphatase (1), glycollate oxidase (2), serine : glyoxylate aminotransferase (3), glutamate : glyoxylate aminotransferase (4), serine hydroxymethyl transferase (5), hydroxypyruvate reductase (6), glycerate kinase (7) and reductive pentose phosphate pathway enzymes (8). GDC, glycine decarboxylase ; GOGAT, glutamate synthase ; GS, glutamine synthetase ; 2-OG, 2-oxoglutarate ; PGA, 3phosphoglycerate. photorespiratory metabolism. As shown in Fig. 5, these include glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate synthase (GOGAT), which reincorporate the ammonia released in glycine oxidation (Keys et al., 1978), and catalase, which processes H O # # formed during the oxidation of glycollate in the peroxisome (Willekens et al., 1995). The oxidation of glycollate by molecular oxygen means that photorespiration consumes at least two molecules of O for each C unit passing through the pathway # # (Fig. 5). Further O consumption might be linked to # glycine oxidation in the mitochondrion (section VI). Photorespiratory O uptake is masked by catalase # activity, which results in evolution of approximately half of the O consumed by glycollate oxidase, and # by O evolution at PSII. From this it is inferred, # first, that photorespiration cannot be quantified by simple gas exchange measurements and, second, that the process is a sink for photosynthetic assimilatory power. Likely rates of photorespiration in leaves have recently been reviewed elsewhere (Keys, 1999). In brief, flux through the photorespiratory pathway depends on the ratio of carboxylation to oxygenation of RuBP (C : O ratio). This ratio reflects, first, the specificity factor of Rubisco, which indicates the enzyme’s affinity and turnover rate for CO relative # to those for O , and second, the ratio of the # chloroplastic concentration of CO to that of O # # (Sharkey, 1988). Decreased C : O ratios with increasing temperature probably reflect changes in both of these factors (Ku & Edwards, 1977 ; Hall & Keys, 1983 ; Chen & Spreitzer, 1992). Photorespiration is attenuated by increasing the availability of CO relative to that of O , as can be # # observed in the laboratory and as occurs naturally in many algae and in the bundle sheath cells of many C % leaves. If one can reasonably talk of typical C : O ratios, then these might be 2–3 in well-watered C $ leaves at 20–35mC (Sharkey, 1988 ; De Veau & Burris, 1989 ; Peterson, 1989). Such ratios mean that, for each carbon atom fixed at Rubisco, 0n67–1 atoms pass through the glycollate pool. Mutants have been instrumental in confirmation REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling of the photorespiratory pathway (Somerville & Ogren, 1979 ; Blackwell et al., 1988 ; Lea & Forde, 1994 ; Leegood et al., 1995). Most of these mutants are unable to survive in air, which emphasizes the need for an effective photorespiratory pathway and leads to the inevitable conclusion that the elimination of RuBP oxygenation is likely to be the most succesful approach to attenuating photorespiration (section V(2)). The inability to grow and photosynthesize in air can be overcome by crossing mutants with wild-type plants to produce heterozygous plants that have intermediate enzyme activities (Hall et al., 1987 ; Havir & McHale, 1988 ; Ha$ usler et al., 1994). Recent studies with barley mutants heterozygous for glycine decarboxylase or serine : glyoxylate aminotransferase suggest that enzymes involved in photorespiratory carbon recycling exert significant control over photosynthesis only when photorespiratory rates are very high relative to net CO fixation (Wingler et al., 1997, # 1999a). Minimal control in these plants implies excess activities in the wild type, consistent with the notion that the principal function of the complex recycling pathway is to reclaim the carbon diverted into glycollate. Nevertheless, work with mutants and transformed plants suggests that the fate of photorespiratory metabolites has some flexibility. In Euglena, serine is formed via an alternative pathway in which methylene-tetrahydrofolate is synthesized with formate derived from glyoxylate. Work with barley mutants with very low glycine decarboxylase activity has shown that this pathway, which allows the conversion of glycine to serine without the release of ammonia, can also occur in higher plants (Wingler et al., 1999b). Genetic transformation has provided good evidence that photorespiratory amino acids can be used in biosyntheses. In poplars with an enhanced capacity for glutathione synthesis, maximal accumulation of this tripeptide (γ-Glu-Cys-Gly) requires the production of glycine via the photorespiratory pathway (Noctor et al., 1999). Glycine and serine can also be withdrawn from the photorespiratory pathway for export (Madore & Grodzinski, 1984). Manipulation of photorespiratory enzymes through genetic transformation is likely to add considerably to the knowledge gained through the production of photorespiratory mutants. Plants have been transformed to contain altered levels of GS (Lea & Forde, 1994 ; Kozaki & Takeba, 1996 ; Temple et al., 1998), Fd-GOGAT (Ferrario-Me! ry et al., 2000) and hydroxypyruvate reductase (Oliver et al., 1993, 1995 ; Sloan et al., 1993). Recently, antisense technology has been used to produce potato plants with decreased glycine decarboxylase (H. Bauwe & D. Heineke, pers. comm.). Like barley mutants with very low enzyme capacity (Blackwell et al., 1990), the transgenic potatoes accumulate glycine to high levels when illuminated in air, even though 371 their ability to grow in air and the capacity of their mitochondria to metabolize glycine resemble the heterozygous barley mutants more closely (Wingler et al., 1997). Much useful information should be generated by comparison of the anti-sense transformants with studies of the full and heterozygous barley mutants. 2. Engineering plants that photorespire less ? Because photorespiration decreases net CO fixation, # there is considerable interest in engineering plants that photosynthesize without photorespiring. There are many reports in the literature of plants engineered to contain less Rubisco (Quick et al., 1991) and, as discussed in section III, these have been used effectively to dissect the contributions made by photorespiration and the Mehler reaction to photosynthetic O uptake (Ruuska et al., 2000). Such # manipulations have also received attention with a view to decreasing the nitrogen requirement of crop species (Quick et al., 1992 ; Masle et al., 1993). Importantly, however, a striking and unexpected side-effect of decreased Rubisco is greatly increased sensitivity to the air pollutant ozone (Wiese & Pell, 1997). This seems to be caused by an effect of decreased Rubisco on the volume of air space within the leaf, exemplifying the unforeseen effects that can result from even simple manipulations. In theory, the most attractive approach to decreasing the rate of photorespiration is by manipulation of the catalytic properties of Rubisco. Although it has been argued that oxygenation is an unavoidable consequence of the Rubisco reaction mechanism (Andrews & Lorimer, 1978), the observation that higher plants have generally higher specificity factors than green algae and photosynthetic bacteria (Jordan & Ogren, 1981) shows that the initial appearance of Rubisco should not be considered an evolutionary fait accompli. Even within phylogenetic groups, there is some variation in Rubisco specificity factors (Parry et al., 1989 ; Read & Tabita, 1994 ; Delgado et al., 1995). It is therefore clear that, in principle, considerable scope exists for decreasing photorespiratory rates by increasing the enzyme’s specificity factor. This might be achieved either by site-directed mutagenesis (Chen & Spreitzer, 1992 ; Parry et al., 1992 ; Read & Tabita, 1994 ; Kostov et al., 1997 ; Madgwick et al., 1998) or by gene replacement, allowing the introduction of Rubisco with naturally high specificity factors into agriculturally important species (Kanevski et al., 1999). Aside from attempts to manipulate Rubisco, photorespiration could be decreased in C plants by $ introducing metabolic features that are currently unique to plants that photorespire less, such as algae or C plants (Panstruga et al., 1997 ; Ku et al., 1999 ; % Ha$ usler et al., 1999). It is perhaps worth noting here 372 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor that, although independent of temperature in C % plants, the quantum yield of CO uptake decreases # with increasing temperature in C plants (Ehleringer $ & Bjo$ rkman, 1977). There is a crossover point at which the quantum yields of C and C photo$ % synthesis are equivalent, suggesting that the energetic costs of abolishing photorespiration and those of processing photorespiratory metabolites are more or less equal at this temperature (30mC in the study of Ehleringer & Bjo$ rkman, 1977). From an energetic point of view, therefore, this transgenic approach is only likely to be cost-effective if ambient temperatures are high enough to make the energetic price worth paying or if light is sufficiently plentiful that quantum yield never becomes relevant. Recent work with mutants of Amaranthus suggests that photorespiratory rates in C plants, although % undoubtedly lower than in most C plants, are far $ from negligible (Lacuesta et al., 1997). Indeed, under appropriate conditions, mutants lacking the C -type phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) % display photorespiratory rates that, as a proportion of net photosynthesis, are similar to those observed in many C plants (Lacuesta et al., 1997). This work $ shows that C plants contain high activities of the % enzymes necessary to process phosphoglycollate, even if flux through the pathway is attenuated by relatively high CO concentrations in the bundle # sheath chloroplasts and the CO evolved in the # bundle sheath mitochondria escapes less readily from the leaf than in C plants. $ In the long term, severe depletion of enzymes involved in the photorespiratory recycling pathway is not an effective way of reducing photorespiration, because many such lesions are lethal when plants are grown in air (Somerville & Ogren, 1979 ; Blackwell et al., 1988). Nevertheless, interesting effects of moderate decreases in GS activity have been reported (Ha$ usler et al., 1994). Heterozygous barley mutants, in which foliar enzyme capacities were about half those in the wild-type, showed a decrease in the number of electrons transported per molecule of CO fixed. This effect was most marked under # conditions favouring a low C : O ratio and high absolute rates of photorespiration, and has been discussed in detail elsewhere (Ha$ usler et al., 1994 ; Leegood et al., 1995). A similar effect has been obtained by overexpression of PEPC (Ha$ usler et al., 1999 ; and references therein). The interesting explanation of this effect was that increased PEPCdependent CO uptake led to higher, not lower, CO # # availability, because the increased production of respiratory substrates stimulated CO release # through malic enzyme and the tricarboxylic acid cycle (Ha$ usler et al., 1999). Decreases in photorespiratory carbon loss might be achieved by metabolic engineering to allow adequate processing of photorespiratory metabolites via novel pathways with modified stoichiometries of CO evolution. One possibility is the introduction of # enzymes that enable the conversion of glycollate to glycerate by a route that does not include a decarboxylation step. The rate of CO evolution # might also be modified by catalase activity, as discussed in section V(5). Would decreased photorespiratory CO release # necessarily entail a sustained increase in net photosynthesis and improved growth ? Slower rates of photorespiration will only increase photosynthetic rates when the latter is not limited by utilization of photosynthate and\or the associated release of Pi (Leegood & Furbank, 1986 ; Sharkey et al., 1986). Longer-term studies of the effect of CO enrichment # have revealed that the initial stimulation of photosynthesis is often followed by decreases in rates (Stitt, 1991). These decreases might to some extent reflect stomatal closure but are probably mainly due to the down-regulation of photosynthetic enzymes as a result of increased foliar carbohydrate. We can therefore surmise that improved growth due to decreased photorespiration might not be achieved unless increased strength of carbohydrate sinks is also engineered. The availability of key nutrients such as nitrogen will also influence the plant’s capacity to exploit any carbon gain resulting from decreased photorespiration. 3. Is photorespiration important in energy dissipation ? Photorespiration uses energy in at least three processes : the recycling of glycollate carbon, the reincorporation of ammonia, and the turnover of the RPP pathway resulting from oxygenation (Fig. 5). If one calculates energy utilization per RuBP metabolized, the process of photorespiration probably demands only slightly more energy than CO # fixation. However, the oxygenation of RuBP does significantly increase the energy required per molecule of CO fixed. This fact has led to the concept # that the physiological significance of photorespiration lies in its wastefulness (Osmond & Bjo$ rkman, 1972 ; Heber & Krause, 1980 ; Osmond & Grace, 1995). According to this view, the processes initiated by oxygenation can be considered, in metabolic terms, to be a futile cycle that uses ATP and reductant to avert potentially deleterious excitation energy densities in the photosynthetic apparatus. One effect of the photorespiratory pathway could therefore be to prevent reaction-centre damage when light energy is in excess, consistent with the effect of O in preventing photoinhibition (Krause, # 1994). We can ask how this postulated function of dissipation should be most usefully considered. Is it a metabolic counterpart of dissipation mechanisms in light-harvesting that are induced by increasing irradiance ? Because photorespiration also uses as- REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling similatory power when light strongly limits photosynthesis (Ehleringer & Bjo$ rkman, 1977), it seems that there is a fundamental difference between this process and those that operate in the pigment beds. As the light intensity increases, there is an increasing probability of a photon being dissipated as heat, whereas the probability that it will serve to power the turnover of the photorespiratory pathway decreases. Nevertheless, the photorespiratory pathway might represent a physiologically desirable and inherent ‘ inefficiency ’ in the phototosynthetic process (Osmond & Grace, 1995). This idea receives apparent support from a transgenic study in tobacco underexpressing or overexpressing chloroplastic GS (Kozaki & Takeba, 1996). Underexpression of the enzyme was shown to lead to an enhanced susceptibility to photoinhibition (Kozaki & Takeba, 1996). However, the conclusion drawn from this effect was somewhat simplistic because, as discussed above, work with mutants has made it clear that a decreased capacity to recycle photorespiratory products leads to a disruption of the overall photosynthetic process. It is difficult to manipulate photorespiratory flux without affecting overall rates of photosynthesis. Data obtained with plants overexpressing GS offer a more persuasive argument : severe photo-oxidation observed in a wild-type leaf exposed to saturating light for 24 h was not observed as a result of similar treatment of a leaf in which GS was overexpressed (Kozaki & Takeba, 1996). However, no indication was given of the reproducibility of this startling effect ; the significance of the study as a whole is somewhat difficult to evaluate in the absence of more detailed data on the characterization of the transformants. One condition in which theory dictates an important role for photorespiration is when the intercellular [CO ] : [O ] ratio drops owing to stomatal # # closure, for example in drought stress. In this case, flux through the photorespiratory pathway will be enhanced (Lawlor, 1976), maintaining photosynthetic electron transport rates while changing the allocation of ATP and reductant between photorespiration and CO fixation (Cornic & Briantais, # 1991). Drought stress is likely to be observed at high ambient temperatures, which in themselves increase the ratio of photorespiration to net CO fixation # (Hanson & Peterson, 1986). Despite the evidence that photorespiratory activity is stimulated during drought stress, it remains to be clearly demonstrated that an increased proportion of absorbed energy flows to photorespiration under these conditions (for further discussion see Osmond & Grace (1995)). Photorespiration is unlikely to be a significant energy sink at low temperatures because of slow overall metabolic rates and high C : O ratios. Can changes in light intensity by themselves alter the proportion of energy allocated to photorespiration ? If the fraction of fixed carbon flowing 373 through the photorespiratory pathway depends solely on the C : O ratio at Rubisco, absolute rates of photorespiration will increase with light intensity in proportion to CO fixation. This would entail both # processes ’ reaching a ceiling at the same light intensities, and photorespiration would seem to be a poor adaptive mechanism for the dissipation of supra-optimal light. One factor that would increase the amount of energy required per molecule of CO # fixed, independently of the C : O ratio at Rubisco, is an increased peroxidative decarboxylation of photorespiratory oxo-acids (Hanson & Peterson, 1986) (see section V(5)). However, no marked change was observed in the proportion of electrons allocated to photorespiration as a function of light intensity (Hanson & Peterson, 1986 ; Peterson, 1990). Variation in the C : O ratio with light intensity remains doubtful and in any case must be much less significant than effects caused by changes in temperature or stomatal resistance. 4. Production and processing of photorespiratory HO # # In a C leaf under conditions favouring high rates of $ oxygenation, such as a warm summer’s day, the photorespiratory pathway will probably be the fastest process generating H O (Fig. 5). Unequivo# # cal evidence that catalase is crucial in removing photorespiratory H O first came from the isolation # # of a barley mutant, with very low catalase activity, that was unable to photosynthesize and grow well in air, particularly at high light intensity and temperature (Kendall et al., 1983). More recently, similar effects have been reported for tobacco plants in which the major form of catalase was decreased by anti-sense technology (Chamnongpol et al., 1996 ; Takahashi et al., 1997 ; Willekens et al., 1997 ; Brisson et al., 1998). These observations conclusively demonstrate the necessity of sufficient catalase activity to cope with photorespiratory H O pro# # duction. Thus, although APX and other components of the ascorbate–glutathione pathway might be associated with peroxisomes (Yamaguchi et al., 1995 ; Bunkelmann & Trelease, 1996 ; Jime! nez et al., 1997 ; Zhang et al., 1997), these enzymes seem incapable of coping with the abundant H O production that # # accompanies high photorespiratory flux. The tight link between catalase and photorespiration is further evidenced by the relatively low activities in C % species (Tolbert et al., 1969) and the absence of a phenotype in maize mutants deficient in catalase (Scandalios, 1994). In eukaryotes, catalase is a haem protein with a very high maximal activity but a very low affinity for H O : activity increases linearly with substrate up to # # concentrations well above those found in living cells. It is now clear that both C and C plants contain $ % multiple isoforms of catalase (Willekens et al., 1995 ; 374 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor Scandalios et al., 1997). Apart from a mitochondrial isoform in maize, catalase seems to be localized predominantly, if not exclusively, in microsomes (Willekens et al., 1995). Some activity in maize can be found in the cytosol (Scandalios et al., 1997). The principal difference between the microsomal isoforms seems to lie in their expression patterns, although significant enzymological differences might also exist (Havir & McHale, 1989b). The effects obtained by engineering decreases in catalase activity might have considerable physiological relevance because, like the D1 protein of PSII, catalase undergoes continuous turnover in the light. Ongoing protein synthesis is required to maintain catalase activities : under conditions in which degradation exceeds resynthesis, catalase activities can decrease (Feierabend & Engel, 1986). In stress conditions that impair protein synthesis, such as low or high temperature, or salt stress, a light-dependent decrease in total catalase protein and activity is observed (Volk & Feierabend, 1989 ; Hertwig et al., 1992). The ready permeability of membranes to H O # # might enable enzyme systems ouside the peroxisome to contribute to the scavenging of photorespiratory H O . However, although the chloroplast can # # metabolize external H O at high rates (section # # III(4)), it seems from the studies of plants with decreased catalase activities that other routes of H O detoxification are unable to take the place of # # catalase effectively when photorespiration is rapid. The extent to which H O leaks from the peroxisome # # during glycollate oxidation in plants with sufficient catalase activity is unclear. There is evidence that photorespiratory metabolites are efficiently channelled within the peroxisome (Heupel & Heldt, 1994 ; Raghavendra et al., 1998). The peroxisome’s ultrastructure might therefore hinder H O efflux, # # maintaining high concentrations in the vicinity of catalase. Because catalase has a high Km for H O , # # high substrate concentrations would substantially increase the efficiency of H O removal, perhaps # # preventing the oxidation of other compounds in peroxidatic activity, which can occur at lower H O # # concentrations (Scandalios et al., 1997). 5. Catalase and foliar H O levels # # Even under conditions in which foliar metabolism is severely disrupted, low catalase activity rarely leads to increases in total foliar H O levels. This seems to # # be true whether catalase activity is decreased by cold-induced light inactivation (MacRae & Ferguson, 1985 ; Volk & Feierabend, 1989), chemical inhibition (Ferguson & Dunning, 1986) or transgenic manipulation (Willekens et al., 1997). The administration of aminotriazole to pea seedlings via the transpiration stream caused an increase in H O # # levels only when conditions favoured very high photorespiratory rates (Amory et al., 1992). One clear response to lower catalase activities is an increase in foliar glutathione content (Smith et al., 1984, 1985 ; Smith, 1985 ; Ferguson & Dunning, 1986 ; Volk & Feierabend, 1989 ; Willekens et al., 1997). In the barley mutant (Smith et al., 1984) and in transgenic tobacco (Willekens et al., 1997), transfer to ‘ photorespiratory ’ conditions caused a striking increase in total glutathione (approx. 6-fold within 2–4 d), almost all of which was due to accumulation of the oxidized form. By contrast, the redox state of the ascorbate pool was little affected (Willekens et al., 1997). These effects were accompanied by the induction of both GSH-dependent peroxidase and APX (Willekens et al., 1997), although no increase in APX activity was observed after the chemical inhibition of catalase activity in pea (Amory et al., 1992). The latter study also found no change in extractable GR activity, similar to results obtained after decreases in catalase activity by high light and low temperature (Volk & Feierabend, 1989). However, in the barley mutant, extractable foliar GR activity approximately doubled on transfer to air, with similar kinetics to the accumulation and oxidation of the glutathione pool (compare Azevedo et al., 1998 and Smith et al., 1984). Tight functional linkage between the ascorbate and glutathione redox couples (Foyer & Halliwell, 1976) is indicated by the preferential oxidation of the glutathione pool when catalase activity is decreased (Willekens et al., 1997). Because no enzymes have been reported in leaves that are capable of catalysing the H O -dependent peroxidation of GSH at rates # # comparable to that of ascorbate, oxidation of the glutathione pool probably occurs primarily via ascorbate peroxidation. A small contribution might be made by the GSH-dependent reduction of organic hydroperoxides catalysed by GSH-peroxidases. A correlation between decreased catalase activity and accelerated ascorbate peroxidation was evidenced by an increased MDHA electron spin resonance signal on the treatment of bean leaves with sulphite (Veljovic-Jovanovic et al., 1998). If the glutathione pool is oxidized via ascorbate peroxidation, its oxidation state will depend on the relative rates of reaction of GSH with DHA and the reduction of GSSG by GR. The net oxidation of the glutathione pool therefore suggests that GR activity, whether increased or not, is unable to keep pace with the rapid redox cycling of the ascorbate pool (although effects due to a limiting supply of reductant cannot be discounted). Because this is consistent with the improved protection of the ascorbate pool observed in plants overexpressing GR in the chloroplast (Foyer et al., 1995), decreased catalase activity might result in increased metabolism of photorespiratory H O in this organelle. In the barley catalase mutant, # # however, GSSG accumulation was found to be more or less equally distributed between the chloroplast REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling and the rest of the cell (Smith et al., 1985). Factors likely to be responsible for the increases in total glutathione have been discussed elsewhere (Noctor & Foyer, 1998a). H O can also be reduced to water by non-enzymic # # reaction with oxo-acids, including glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate (Zelitch, 1972 ; Elstner & Heupel, 1973). Because these reactions result in the release of CO , they increase the proportion of glycollate # carbon evolved in the photorespiratory pathway, thereby increasing the quantum requirement of CO # fixation and decreasing the rate of net photosynthesis. Although their quantitative significance is controversial, these reactions probably occur to some extent in vivo and are increased by inhibition of catalase activity in leaf peroxisomes (Walton & Butt, 1981). In pea, the inhibition of catalase caused an increase in formate content, presumably due to the decarboxylation of glyoxylate (Amory et al., 1992). Evidence has been presented that the percentage of glycollate carbon respired through the photorespiratory pathway is variable ; at the CO com# pensation point this can be double that of the widely accepted minimum of 25% (Hanson & Peterson, 1986). If this is so, then a genetic approach to reducing H O -dependent decarboxylation is a strat# # egy worth pursuing in the quest to attenuate photorespiration. Indeed, tobacco mutants have been isolated that show improved rates of photosynthesis, particularly at high O levels, and that # have increased catalase activities (Zelitch, 1989). More recently, in transformed tobacco, the underexpression of catalase has been shown to be associated with an increased CO compensation # point, whereas the reverse was observed in plants overexpressing the enzyme (Brisson et al., 1998). By contrast, labelling experiments in the catalasedeficient barley mutant produced no evidence for increased CO release in conditions promoting high # rates of photorespiration (Kendall et al., 1983), even though increased CO release can occur in barley # lacking sufficient aminotransferase activity to keep pace with glyoxylate production (Murray et al., 1987). Further work is required to resolve the apparent discrepancy between the results in barley and tobacco (Kendall et al., 1983 ; Brisson et al., 1998). 6. Catalase and non-photorespiratory H O # # generation Considerable attention has recently been focused on the question of whether catalase is important in metabolizing H O of non-photorespiratory origin, # # particularly in C plants, which have very high foliar $ catalase activities. There is controversy over whether catalase has an important role in the hypersensitive response and systemic acquired resistance that can follow pathogen attack (Chen et al., 1993 ; Rao et al., 375 1997 ; Dat et al., 1998). In maize seedlings, which have higher photorespiratory rates than mature plants (De Veau & Burris, 1989), enhanced catalase transcripts, protein and activities were associated with decreased chilling-induced oxidative damage (Prasad, 1996). However, this effect was due to induction of the maize-specific mitochondrial isoform : markedly decreased peroxisomal catalase activities did not increase sensitivity to chilling in tobacco (Willekens et al., 1997). Nevertheless, leaf discs from the same tobacco plants metabolized exogenous H O less effectively and showed increased ion # # leakage after illumination in the presence of methyl viologen, whose primary site of action is in the chloroplast. Moreover, the symptoms developed by leaves from these plants in supra-optimal light could be prevented by the simple yet ingenious step of infiltrating the leaf with a solution of bovine catalase, whose action was presumably extracellular (Willekens et al., 1997). In apparent contrast to these results, which suggest that catalase has important roles in processes other than photorespiration, total foliar catalase activities can be decreased substantially, without detriment to the leaf, by growth at high [CO ] for 1–2 d (Havir & McHale, # 1989a ; Volk & Feierabend, 1989). Similarly, barley mutants with very low catalase activity show normal growth at high [CO ] (Kendall et al., 1983). # Because cyanobacteria possess catalase (Tel-Or et al., 1986), we might wonder why this enzyme is not present in the higher plant chloroplast. Some, but not all, cyanobacteria contain APX (Miyake et al., 1991), suggesting that this enzyme appeared during cyanobacterial evolution and eventually replaced catalase in processing H O produced by the photo# # synthetic electron transport chain. One possibility is that catalase would simply not be able to maintain sufficiently low H O levels in the higher-plant # # chloroplast. In animals, however, in which catalase and glutathione peroxidase are the major activities scavenging H O , and where H O levels are gen# # # # erally lower than in leaves, catalase activities in different organs are inversely correlated with H O # # concentration (Scandalios et al., 1997). Because enzyme regulation by the Td system occurs among all major taxonomic groups that perform oxygenic photosynthesis (Buchanan, 1991), some insight can be gained from a comparison of the interspecific characteristics and distribution of this regulation with the occurrence of catalase and APX in cyanobacteria. It is worth noting here that photosynthesis and the thiol-regulated enzymes might be less sensitive to oxidants in both unicellular algae and cyanobacteria, perhaps allowing these species to tolerate relatively high stromal H O concentrations # # (Takeda et al., 1995). Moreover, the recent cloning and purification of catalase from one cyanobacterium showed the enzyme to be very similar to catalases from non-photosynthetic bacteria, with higher 376 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor peroxidatic activity and affinity for H O than plant # # catalases (Mutsada et al., 1996). These properties might have contributed to the protection against drought conferred on tobacco plants by overexpression of an E. coli catalase in the chloroplast (Shikanai et al., 1998). VI. significant compared with photosynthetic O evol# ution. Respiration in the light and possible interactions with carbon and nitrogen assimilation have been reviewed recently (Kro$ mer, 1995 ; Noctor & Foyer, 1998b). Here we shall confine ourselves to a brief discussion of mitochondrial AOS generation and removal, and the related question of the role of the alternative oxidase (AOX). 1. ‘ Photosynthetic ’ respiration Respiratory activity in the light can be considered part of the photosynthetic process for at least three reasons (Fig. 6). First, the oxidation of photorespiratory glycine might be linked to mitochondrial electron transport activities. Second, some oxidative flow of carbon must occur through parts of the glycolytic pathway and the tricarboxylic acid cycle, to generate biosynthetic precursors, in particular those required for photosynthetic nitrogen assimilation. Third, the mitochondria might be important in adjustment of the stromal redox state during photosynthesis, by burning off excess reducing equivalents. The inability to determine respiratory CO release and O uptake in the light with any # # degree of precision complicates the interpretation of photosynthesis measurements, particularly those of maximum quantum yield performed at low light intensities, in which respiratory O uptake might be # Photorespiration 2. AOS in the mitochondrion Superoxide production occurs at two principal sites in plant mitochondria (Fig. 6) : NAD(P)H dehydrogenases and the cytochrome bc complex (Rich & " Bonner, 1978 ; and references therein), the reductant in the latter case probably being ubisemiquinone (Turrens et al., 1985). These processes result in the formation of H O , primarily through the action of a # # mitochondrion-specific Mn-dependent SOD (Jackson et al., 1978). The metabolism of H O of mitochondrial origin # # is controversial. Extramitochondrial enzymes, particularly catalase and extracellular guaiacol-type peroxidases, might have important roles (Puntarulo et al., 1991). A study in maize reported that mitochondria contain cytochrome c-peroxidase activity, but that associated APX and guaiacol-type peroxidase activities are cytosolic contaminants Rest of cell Respiratory C flow Export of reductant for biosyntheses from chloroplast NAD(P)+ NAD(P)H Glycine Reductant Inner mitochondrial membrane Glycine decarboxylase complex CO2 NH3 CH2-THF O2• – O2 I NADH NAD+ O2 Q Intermembrane space H2 O AOX IV III O2 O2• – O2 H2 O Matrix Fig. 6. Diagram of mitochondrial electron transport showing potential sites of superoxide (O d−) generation and # likely important interactions with photosynthetic processes (in green). Electron transfer within the mitochondrial chain is depicted by red arrows. Reducing equivalents from NAD(P)H can also enter the chain at other dehydrogenases associated with the inner membrane. AOX, alternative oxidase ; I, complex I (NADH dehydrogenase), III, complex III (cytochrome bc complex) ; IV, complex IV (cytochrome oxidase) ; Q, " ubiquinone ; CH -THF, methylene tetrahydrofolate. # REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling (Prasad et al., 1995). Other investigators have concluded that APX activity might be integral to plant mitochondria (Dalton et al., 1993 ; Yamaguchi et al., 1995 ; Jime! nez et al., 1997), although immunogold labelling failed to localize APX in this compartment (Dalton et al., 1993) and mitochondrial cDNA or gene sequences have not yet been identified. Mitochondria contain GR activity (Edwards et al., 1990 ; Rasmusson & Møller, 1990), which might be attributable to the same protein as chloroplastic GR, with both activities being encoded by a common gene (Creissen et al., 1995). If so, the biochemical and kinetic differences between the activities (Edwards et al., 1990) could perhaps reflect organellar differences in modification of the protein. How significant is the mitochondrial contribution to the total AOS production of the photosynthetic cell in the light ? During electron transport in mitochondria from capsicum fruit (Purvis, 1997), superoxide production accounted for just over 1% of total electron flow to O . This proportion of electron # flow to superoxide is broadly similar to that estimated in PSII membrane fragments (Ananyev et al., 1994) but is smaller than many estimates of the fraction of electrons engaged in the univalent reduction of O at PSI (section III(3)). Because total # electron transport rates in the chloroplast can easily exceed total mitochondrial electron transport rates, absolute rates of superoxide production in the mitochondria are presumably much lower than those in the chloroplast. Similarly, in C species, peroxi$ somal H O generation is likely to far oustrip that # # occurring in the mitochondria. Nevertheless, the mitochondria might make a more significant contribution to AOS generation in the illuminated photosynthetic cell under certain stress conditions, such as chilling. 3. AOX : regulation and significance to photosynthesis One reason that plant mitochondria do not produce more superoxide could be the presence of an AOX that catalyses the tetravalent reduction of O by # ubiquinone. Although the importance of this enzyme in thermogenesis is established, its role in most plant tissues is less well defined. The long-held view that the AOX is important only when reductant is in excess has been challenged by the recent elucidation of various factors controlling the activity of the enzyme and its dependence on the reduction state of the ubiquinone pool. Activity is increased by certain organic acids, notably pyruvate, and by reduction of the protein (Millar et al., 1993 ; Umbach & Siedow, 1993 ; Vanlerberghe et al., 1995). In this active state, the AOX is likely to compete with the cytochrome pathway for electrons (Day et al., 1994). Effects similar to those of added thiols were observed in 377 the presence of organic acids whose oxidation can be NADP+-linked ; it was therefore proposed that a mitochondrial NADPH-Td system is responsible for reduction (Vanlerberghe et al., 1995). Recent studies using site-directed mutagenesis to identify regulatory cysteine residues have reported somewhat contrasting results for the Arabidopsis and tobacco proteins (Rhoads et al., 1998 ; Vanlerberghe et al., 1998). In addition to these controls over activity, various factors, including H O , induce expression # # of the tobacco Aox1 gene (Wagner & Krab, 1995 ; Vanlerberghe & McIntosh, 1996). Because it has been shown that AOX activity is associated with lower rates of superoxide generation in isolated mitochondria, it seems that an important function of this enzyme might be in keeping rates of univalent O reduction comparatively low (Purvis et al., 1995 ; # Purvis, 1997). Despite this, severe underexpression of the tobacco enzyme led to marked visible symptoms only when the cytochrome pathway was inhibited (Vanlerberghe et al., 1995). In isolated mitochondria, the rate of superoxide production is decreased by addition by ADP or uncouplers (Purvis et al., 1995 ; Purvis, 1997). Because AOX activity supports little or no ATP synthesis, it might be important in regulating ATP yields and the extent to which ATP : ADP ratios feed back on electron transport and favour superoxide formation. New evidence has been presented that the AOX is important in allowing high rates of oxidation of photorespiratory glycine by the mitochondrial electron transport chain (Igamberdiev et al., 1997). Although isolated leaf mitochondria oxidize glycine in preference to other respiratory substrates (Dry et al., 1983), it has often been considered improbable that the electron transport chain is the major route regenerating NAD+ for ongoing glycine decarboxylase activity (Fig. 6). There are two principal reasons for this. First, carbon recycling via the photorespiratory pathway requires NAD+ (in the mitochondrion, to oxidize 50% of the glycine formed) and NADH (to reduce hydroxypyruvate in the peroxisome) in equal measure, and shuttle systems have been characterized that can compete effectively with the electron transport chain (Journet et al., 1981 ; Ebbighausen et al., 1985). Second, high rates of oxidative phosphorylation linked to glycine oxidation could potentially cause a very high ATP : ADP ratio in the mitochondria and cytosol of photorespiring leaf cells, which has not generally been observed (Gardestro$ m & Wigge, 1988). This anomaly might be resolved in part by AOX-linked glycine oxidation (Igamberdiev et al., 1997), although this would necessitate another source of reductant for peroxisomal glycerate synthesis. More generally, variable electron flow through the AOX might contribute to the adjustment of cellular adenylate status during photosynthesis, allowing flexibility in the rate of necessary respiratory flows 378 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor linked to processes such as nitrogen assimilation (Noctor & Foyer, 1998b, 2000). VIII. 1. The need for sensors, signals and transducers As semi-autonomous organelles with a wide range of assimilatory functions and unique biochemical pathways, chloroplasts are able to transcribe and translate the limited amount of genetic information contained within the plastid genome but are strongly dependent on imported proteins that are encoded in the nuclear genome and translated in the cytoplasm. The photosynthetic apparatus has to respond rapidly to fluctuations in essential inputs, such as light and CO , and this frequently requires the concerted # activation of processes occurring in several cellular compartments. Leaves at the top or the very bottom of the canopy can experience conditions approximating steady-state but most leaves are subject to alternating periods of high and low light. In understorey plants, sunflecks are a vital resource and maximum use of available energy is made possible by appropriate regulation (Pearcy, 1990). However, light energy input can be far in excess of that required by metabolism, leading to potentially dangerous imbalances in supply and demand that provoke photoinhibitory damage. The supply of light energy therefore has to be carefully managed to maximize the efficiency of capture and minimize the risk of damage. Current evidence suggests that, in addition to the relatively rapid regulation of light harvesting, changes in supply and demand are accommodated through short-term and long-term adaptation mediated by transduction of signals sensed by the redox state of key components (Fig. 7). At least two interrelated redox components seem to be important. First, certain stimuli are transduced with AOS (particularly H O ) as signalling messengers. Se# # cond, considerable evidence points to a crucial role for the redox state of at least one electron transport component, PQ. The past few years have seen the accumulation of considerable evidence supporting the existence of local (intracellular) sensor-response systems. Very recently, results have been obtained that suggest the intriguing possibility of the remote acclimation of photosynthesis. 2. Signal transduction at the local level As the rate-limiting step of photosynthetic electron transport, the rate of PQ oxidation is central to the control of photosynthesis. Although it has been known for many years that the redox state of the PQ pool influences the rate of electron transfer between the photosystems, it is only relatively recently that the impacts on transcriptional, translational and post-translational regulation have been recognized. The first indications that the PQ pool functions as a sensor to initiate adaptive responses date back almost 20 yr. Short-term changes in redox state (of the order of seconds to minutes) lead to the posttranslational adaptive changes known as state Environmental Developmental Changes in: H2O2 PQ redox state Nitric oxide Antioxidants Oxidative load Electron pressure Membrane potentials Signal transport Intracellular Intercellular Long distance Acclimatory responses Induction of antioxidative system, acclimation of photosynthesis Fig. 7. Conceptual relationships between sensors, transmitters and responses in signal transduction leading to the acclimation of photosynthesis. Information relating to developmental and environmental conditions is detected through changes in bioenergetic parameters such as electron pressure, entailing the modulation of specific components such as oxidant concentrations and the redox state of quinones involved in electron transport chains. Emerging evidence indicates that signal transduction can operate locally (within cells) or remotely (between different cells and tissues). REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling transitions, involving oligomeric changes in the organization of the photosystems (Bennett, 1979). Control over state transitions is mediated by the redox-dependent activation of a protein kinase as the PQ pool becomes reduced (Horton et al., 1981). This kinase phosphorylates the major PSII lightharvesting component (LHCII), causing LHCII to become detached from the PSII complex, thereby contributing to the regulation of the distribution of excitation energy between the photosystems. More recent work has also implicated the redox state of the PQ pool in mediating longer-term adaptation that requires alterations in the rate of transcription and\or translation of plastid and nuclear genes (Danon & Mayfield, 1994 ; Escoubas et al., 1995 ; Maxwell et al., 1995 ; Vener et al., 1995, 1998 ; Karpinski et al., 1997 ; Pfannschmidt et al., 1999). In some cases, these effects seem to occur via by a redox-activated protein kinase. Analogous signalling systems have been described in other organisms. In E. coli, for example, a protein, Aer, acts as a signal transducer sensing the availability of intracellular energy. Together with the serine chemoreceptor, Tsr, Aer senses the proton motive force (or the cellular redox state), enabling the bacterium to locate environments in which maximal energy is available for growth (Rebbapragada et al., 1997). In the photosynthetic bacterium, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, a two-component regulatory system is well characterized that is involved in the redox control of photosynthetic gene expression in response to O availability. The prr loci afford positive # regulation of photosynthetic genes during anaerobiosis (Eraso & Kaplan, 1994 ; Mosley et al., 1994). prrB encodes a sensor histidine kinase that is responsive to the removal of O and functions # through the response regulator, prrA, which activates the expression of genes involved in photosynthesis. A similar system involving RegA has been described in Rhodobacter capsulatus (Mosley et al., 1994). Mutations in prrA lead to a loss of photosynthetic gene expression, whereas the deletion of prrB has no effect, perhaps owing to the availability of an alternative phosphate donor (Eraso & Kaplan, 1996). The two-component prrA\B system might also integrate the control of photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation (Joshi & Tabita, 1996), the need to remove excess reducing power generally being of paramount importance in the orchestration of photosynthetic carbon and nitrogen metabolism. In higher plants the redox state of the photosynthetic electron transport chain and PSII excitation pressure seem to be key elements in redox sensing. For instance, the PQ redox state controls the rate of transcription of PSI and PSII reaction centre proteins (Pfannschmidt et al., 1999). Changes in the rate of transcription seem to arise from longterm light-induced perturbations of the PQ redox state that ultimately lead to changes in the stoi- 379 chiometry of PSI and PSII. When the flux through either photosystem limits the rate of electron transport, the transcription of genes encoding components of the other photosystem is induced. Conversely, genes encoding proteins comprising the photosystem whose activity is in excess are repressed. This indicates that extensive metabolic\redox cross-talk couples the redox state of the PQ pool to the transcription of specific chloroplast genes. The PQ pool might also influence the transcription of antioxidant genes. Exposure of low-light-adapted Arabidopsis plants to high light induced the induction of genes encoding cytosolic APX (Karpinski et al., 1997). Although the biochemical significance of a cytosolic response to a stress of chloroplastic origin remains to be determined, this does imply the existence of signals that relay information on the redox state of the photosynthetic electron transport chain to the nucleus. The APX protein family also seems to be associated with a second type of signal transduction system in plants, involving 14–3-3 proteins, a highly conserved, relatively small and functionally diverse protein family. In plants the best characterized group of 14–3-3 proteins is involved in the control of nitrate reductase activity (Moorhead et al., 1996), whereas a second group interacts directly with the C-terminal region of the plant plasmalemma H+-ATPase in a fusicoccindependent manner (Jahn et al., 1997). In general, these proteins are considered to coordinate carbon– nitrogen interactions in leaves and to be involved in the transcriptional regulation of genes in stress situations (Brandt et al., 1992 ; Jarillo et al., 1994 ; Ferl, 1996). APX3 interacts directly with GF14λ (H. Zhang, pers. comm.), suggesting that this Arabidopsis 14–3-3 protein could have a role in signal transduction involving antioxidants. 3. Remote signalling and responses leading to acclimation of photosynthesis ? One of the earliest responses of plants to pathogen attack is the elicited production of AOS by plasmalemma-associated systems such as NADPH oxidases. H O produced in this way is implicated in # # eliciting local responses such as cell-wall crosslinking and induction of antioxidant defences, as well as long-range defence responses in the process known as systemic acquired resistance (Levine et al., 1994 ; Draper, 1997 ; Durner et al., 1997 ; Delledonne et al., 1998). It has only recently been considered that AOS might also act as signalling molecules mediating systemic acclimation of the photosythetic system (Foyer & Noctor, 1999 ; Karpinski et al., 1999). Responses induced in Arabidopsis subjected to high levels of light were not confined to the exposed leaf areas, but were also observed in adjacent leaves on the same rosette that had not been exposed (Karpinski et al., 1999). The adjacent leaves showed 380 REVIEW C. H. Foyer and G. Noctor increases in H O levels after the remote stress, # # coupled with increased expression of the luciferase reporter gene under control of the promoter from APX2, a gene encoding a cytosolic APX. Most intriguingly of all, subsequent light stress of adjacent leaves that had not been directly exposed led to smaller decreases in photosynthetic efficiency than in leaves from plants on which no leaves had been prestressed (Karpinski et al., 1999). These results indicate the presence of a systemic signalling system for excess irradiation that responds to changes in cellular redox state. Once again, key components seem to be H O and signals arising from the PQ # # pool (Karpinski et al., 1999). Although the advantage of this system to plants exposed to a relatively constant light regime is not clear, it might be of potential benefit to species subject to rapid alterations in light intensity ; for instance, plants whose major source of light is sunflecks. The induction of protective systems in leaves remote from the excess light stimulus would perhaps give such plants a preemptive advantage in preventing damage while allowing them to make maximal use of transiently abundant light energy. 4. Interactions between AOS, NO) and antioxidants Whereas AOS produced by the chloroplasts and mitochondria can act alone as signals to trigger changes in gene expression, it is clear from studies in both animal and plant systems that signalling via AOS is integrated with a second signalling pathway involving active nitrogen species. Oxidative stress in mammalian cells is enhanced by the production of active nitrogen species, notably nitric oxide (NO)). This secondary messenger induces signalling cascades involving cyclic GMP and Ca#+. It is also a potent inhibitor of cytochrome c oxidase, and increases the production of superoxide by mammalian mitochondria (Poderoso et al., 1996). This increase in AOS production initiates a reaction between NO) and superoxide to form hydroxyl radicals and peroxynitrite. AOS modulate NO) signalling, leading to apoptosis in cells attacked by pathogens (Delledonne et al., 1998). NO) is synthesized in plants, probably either from arginine via a nitric oxide synthase or by nitrite reduction, and has been shown to be an integral component of secondary messenger cascades and to induce defence systems (Cueto et al. 1996 ; Leshem, 1996 ; Laxalt et al., 1997 ; Beligni & Lamattina, 1999). A potent inhibitor of nitrogenase, NO) forms a stable complex with iron (II) leghaemoglobin in developing and mature root nodules but is less abundant in older nodules and is absent from senescent ones (Trinchant & Rigaud, 1982 ; Mathieu et al., 1998). This observation presents an intriguing possibility regarding the interpretation of studies on the expression of haemoglobin-like proteins in plants (Bulow et al., 1999). Although effects observed have been discussed in terms of altered O transport or # storage, they could also reflect the modification of signal transduction cascades involving NO). Like the mammalian enzyme, the plant cytochrome oxidase is inhibited by NO), whereas the AOX is unaffected (Millar & Day, 1996), contrasting with the stimulatory effect of AOS on AOX gene expression discussed in section VI(3). Of the complex array of antioxidants found in plant cells, only glutathione and ascorbate have documented multiple functions, as discussed previously (Noctor & Foyer, 1998a). The millimolar concentrations of these antioxidants in photosynthetic cells might be necessary for roles other than AOS scavenging. The maintenance of ascorbate and glutathione homeostasis, in the face of the multiple demands placed on the pools, involves a complex interplay between synthesis, degradation, transport, storage, oxidation–reduction, further metabolism, and catabolism, because plants respond to changing environmental conditions. Although the ascorbate : DHA and GSH : GSSG ratios are rigorously controlled, these redox couples are ideally suited to signal transduction, first because they are relatively stable and second because they are mobile compounds that are transported within cells and between cells. Each component might itself be involved in signal transduction but it is more likely that the redox state of each couple is the most influential factor. In particular, GSSG readily interacts with proteins to form mixed disulphides in the process known as thiolation (Thomas et al., 1995). Thiolation modifies metabolism, protein turnover and gene transcription, because it protects enzymes from irreversible inactivation and degradation. It might protect the thiol-modulated enzymes from proteolysis under conditions of oxidative stress. Therefore, in addition to changes in AOS concentrations, fluctuations in the ascorbate : DHA and GSH : GSSG ratios in photosynthetic cells might have important consequences not only for defence metabolism but also for the regulation of genes associated with adaptive responses. VIII. The above discussion has treated photosynthesis as a whole-cell process, with special emphasis on the interactions between the different pathways that involve O . It has long been considered that # photosynthetic cells are particularly susceptible to oxidative damage, because photosynthesis is a photodynamic process producing O . During evolution, # the photosynthetic process has encompassed chemically unavoidable reactions with O such as the # Mehler reaction and the oxygenase activity of Rubisco. Despite the potentially damaging nature of REVIEW Oxygen processing in photosynthesis : regulation and signalling the side-products of these reactions, it is now evident that much of the responses to increased concentrations of AOS, even those that are apparently deleterious, do not result from simple physicochemical damage, but reflect acclimatory changes in gene expression and metabolism. This means that the manipulation of photosynthetic oxygen metabolism offers great potential both because of the pivotal functions of oxygen species in energy metabolism and their pivotal roles in signal transduction and the control of gene expression. Although AOS are always present in plant cells, accumulation above a certain threshold provides an early signal of perturbations in energy metabolism. In the extreme case, the accumulation of AOS triggers apoptosis and premature senescence in leaves, effects that require the antioxidative system to be perturbed or temporarily overwhelmed. Mutants provide an incisive tool for dissecting mechanistic processes, but this approach is complicated by a compensatory engagement of alternative pathways. We emphasize that mechanisms that can operate are not necessarily those that do operate under physiological conditions, and the relative flux through different electron transport pathways remains controversial. A key example is electron partitioning to the Mehler reaction. Although this subject will no doubt continue to evoke much debate, recent work with transformed plants has provided evidence in vivo to corroborate concepts derived from studies in vitro of isolated systems that suggest that in the absence of an ATP sink the rate of this pathway is relatively low (Ruuska et al., 2000). The attractive idea that the Mehler peroxidase pathway is capable of functioning as an unrestricted overflow for electrons is therefore challenged, as a result of the ability to target specific processes in vivo by using molecular approaches. This work also highlights the multiple, often unforeseen, advances that are enabled by the production of transformed plants. Plants with decreased Rubisco were initially used to explore the fractional control of photosynthesis (Quick et al., 1991), but in addition to an evaluation of the importance of the Mehler reaction, such transformants have been used to study other questions such as nitrogen use efficiency and ozone tolerance (Quick et al., 1992 ; Masle et al., 1993 ; Wiese & Pell, 1997). No doubt there exist many components, particularly stress-inducible proteins, that remain to be discovered. Recent examples of such discoveries are 2-cysteine peroxiredoxins and glutathione-dependent peroxidases, which are thylakoid-associated and are induced by stress conditions but whose functions remain uncharacterized. Where components with known functions have been manipulated, some success in raising the ceiling of photosynthesis under stress conditions has been achieved. Further success is likely to require a much deeper understanding of 381 the integrated regulation of gene expression, protein stability and enzyme activity, as well as the interactions between the various components. Although many studies have shown that overexpression of antioxidative enzymes such as SOD can protect against photoinhibition, the mechanism of protection remains obscure. Parameters such as PSII efficiency or overall rates of photosynthesis provide a useful global estimate of physiological function but do not reveal which components are modified by oxidative stress and in which order. For example, a diagnostic marker of oxidative damage to proteins (such as D1) is essential to enable the design of appropriate engineering by site-directed mutagenesis. Optimal protection is likely to require the targeting of enzymes such as SOD and APX to the thylakoid membrane. So far, there have been no reports of specifically engineered decreases in the activities of the thylakoid isoforms of these enzymes. Like high activities of antioxidative enzymes, high chloroplastic concentrations of antioxidants such as ascorbate, glutathione and α-tocopherol should have beneficial effects on photosynthesis, as demonstrated in numerous studies on isolated chloroplasts. Plants with modified amounts of these components will enable us to probe the relationship between photosynthesis and signal transduction under conditions of stress. 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