Cyclic electron transport via the NDH complex sustains photosynthesis and productivity under fluctuating and sub-optimal environments
Cyclic electron transport via the NDH complex sustains photosynthesis and productivity under fluctuating and sub-optimal environments
Kodama, H.; Yamori, W.
AbstractThe chloroplast NADH dehydrogenase-like (NDH) complex mediates cyclic electron transport (CET) around photosystem I (PSI) and contributes to photosynthetic regulation and photoprotection under various environmental stresses. Although NDH function has been extensively characterized under controlled conditions, NDH-deficient mutants often show only subtle phenotypes in such environments, leaving its physiological importance under naturally fluctuating field conditions poorly understood. Here, we evaluated growth, yield, and photosynthetic performance of NDH-deficient rice cultivated under field conditions. Mutant plants exhibited reduced biomass accumulation and grain yield compared with wild type. Detailed physiological analyses revealed that NDH deficiency markedly decreased PSI electron transport and CO2 assimilation, particularly under low temperature and sub-saturating irradiance. At moderate and high temperatures, reductions in carbon fixation were largely confined to low-light conditions, whereas at low temperatures, impairment extended across nearly the entire light response range. Under repetitive fluctuating light regimes, NDH-deficient plants showed progressive declines in photosynthesis accompanied by a selective decrease in PSI photochemical capacity without changes in PSII maximum efficiency, indicating PSI-specific photoinhibition. These findings demonstrate that NDH-dependent CET plays a crucial role in sustaining photosynthetic efficiency and crop productivity in dynamic field environments by stabilizing PSI redox balance and maintaining long-term carbon gain.