Low-temperature stress and photoperiod affect an increased tolerance to photoinhibition in Pinus banksiana seedlings
The capacity to develop tolerance to photoinhibition of photosynthesis was assessed in jack pine seedlings (Pinus banksiana Lamb.). Photoinhibition induced at 5 °C in control jack pine seedlings grown at 20 °C was saturated above an irradiance of 1000 μmol ∙ m−2 ∙ s−1 but was detectable at an irradiance as low as 25 μmol ∙ m−2 ∙ s−1. However, 20 °C seedlings shifted to 5 °C were 2-fold more tolerant to photoinhibition than 20 °C unshifted control seedlings, as detected by either the light-dependent decrease in photochemical efficiency or the apparent quantum yield of O2 evolution. The extent of this tolerance of photoinhibition was dependent upon time, photoperiod, and irradiance during exposure to the low-temperature shift. Furthermore, the tolerance of photoinhibition was correlated with anthocyanin accumulation in 20 °C grown seedlings shifted to 5 °C. In addition, seedlings shifted to 5 °C and an 8-h photoperiod exhibited a 2-fold higher yield of photosystem II electron transport, which was associated with an increased capacity to keep QA, the first stable quinone electron acceptor of photosystem II, oxidized at high irradiance. This was consistent with a 2-fold higher rate of photosynthesis on a chlorophyll basis. We propose that the combination of light attenuation by anthocyanin in the epidermis and enhanced rates of photosynthesis may, in part, account for the reduced sensitivity of jack pine to photoinhibition at low temperature. Key words: anthocyanin, light attenuation, low temperature, Pinus banksiana Lamb, (jack pine), photosynthesis, photoinhibition, photoperiod.