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Acclimation of leaves to low light produces large grana: the origin of the predominant attractive force at work

Authors

Chow, Wah Soon
Jia, Husen
Liggins, John R.

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The Royal Society

Abstract

Photosynthetic membrane sacs (thylakoids) of plants form granal stacks interconnected by non-stacked thylakoids, thereby being able to fine-tune (1) photosynthesis, (2) photoprotection and (3) acclimation to the environment. Growth in low light leads to the formation of large grana, which sometimes contain as many as 160 thylakoids. The net surface charge of thylakoid membranes is negative, even in low-light-grown plants, so an attractive force is required to overcome the electrostatic repulsion. The theoretical van der Waals attraction is, however, at least 20-fold too small to play the role. We determined the enthalpy change, in the spontaneous stacking of previously-unstacked thylakoids in the dark on addition of Mg2+, to be zero or marginally positive (endothermic). The Gibbs free energy change for the spontaneous process is necessarily negative, a requirement that can only be met by an increase in entropy for an endothermic process. We conc! lude that the dominant attractive force in thylakoid stacking is entropy-driven. Several mechanisms for increasing entropy upon stacking of thylakoid membranes in the dark, particularly in low-light plants, are discussed. In the light, which drives the chloroplast far away from equilibrium, granal stacking accelerates non-cyclic photophosphorylation, possibly enhancing the rate at which entropy is produced.

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Source

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B (2012) 367, 3494–3502

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