Growth responses of Arabidopsis DNA repair mutants to solar irradiation
- 12 May 2003
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Physiologia Plantarum
- Vol. 118 (2) , 183-192
- https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1399-3054.2003.00062.x
Abstract
UV‐B radiation damages a variety of cellular components. A plant's ability to resist the effects of UV is a product of its ability to reduce exposure (through the optimization of growth pattern and the production of UV absorbing pigments) and its ability to repair or replace damaged molecules. The expression of these UV resistance mechanisms is sensitive to the quantity and quality of ambient light. In the present study the significance of DNA repair as a UV resistance mechanism in Arabidopsis was investigated by comparing the effects of solar UV on the growth of a variety of repair‐proficient and ‐deficient Arabidopsis lines grown under natural light, focusing on the effects of UV on the growth of well‐established plants. It was found that solar UV had an inhibitory effect on the growth of wild‐type plants, and that this effect is enhanced in repair‐defective lines. Plants defective in the cyclobutane dimer photolyase are most sensitive to the effects of UV‐B on plant height and rosette diameter growth, indicating that, at least in this Arabidopsis ecotype and at this stage of growth, this enzyme plays an important role in UV resistance. A mutant defective in nucleotide excision repair (NER), a non‐specific repair pathway, also displayed a significant, though lesser, sensitivity to solar UV‐B, suggesting that either the transcription‐coupled repair of UV‐induced dimers, or the repair of some other UV‐induced lesion, is also important for optimal growth. The relatively mild enhancement of UV sensitivity in repair‐defective Arabidopsis stands in dramatic contrast to the immediate, severe, and ultimately lethal effects of sunlight on repair‐defective (XP) humans.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Growth of Arabidopsis flavonoid mutants under solar radiation and UV filtersEnvironmental and Experimental Botany, 1999
- An Arabidopsis photolyase mutant is hypersensitive to ultraviolet-B radiationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- Is increased UV-B a threat to crop photosynthesis and productivity?Photosynthesis Research, 1995
- ALFALFA SEEDLINGS GROWN OUTDOORS ARE MORE RESISTANT TO UV‐INDUCED DNA DAMAGE THAN PLANTS GROWN IN A UV‐FREE ENVIRONMENTAL CHAMBERPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1994
- Relationship between Endopolyploidy and Cell Size in Epidermal Tissue of Arabidopsis.Plant Cell, 1993
- Relationship between Endopolyploidy and Cell Size in Epidermal Tissue of ArabidopsisPlant Cell, 1993
- A UV-Sensitive Mutant of Arabidopsis Defective in the Repair of Pyrimidine-Pyrimidinone(6-4) DimersScience, 1993
- Arabidopsis Flavonoid Mutants Are Hypersensitive to UV-B IrradiationPlant Cell, 1993
- Arabidopsis Flavonoid Mutants Are Hypersensitive to UV-B Irradiation.Plant Cell, 1993
- THE BIOLOGY OF THE (6–4) PHOTOPRODUCTPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1989