Permanent stress adaptation and unexpected high light tolerance in the shade-adapted <i>Chlamydomonas priscui</i>

TitlePermanent stress adaptation and unexpected high light tolerance in the shade-adapted Chlamydomonas priscui
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsPopson, D, D’Silva, S, Wheeless, K, Morgan-Kiss, RM
JournalPlants
Volume13
Issue16
Pagination2254
Date Published08/2024
KeywordsCyclic electron flow, environmental change, extremophile, photo-acclimation, photoinhibition
Abstract

The Antarctic photopsychrophile, Chlamydomonas priscui UWO241, is adapted to extreme environmental conditions, including permanent low temperatures, high salt, and shade. During long-term exposure to this extreme habitat, UWO241 appears to have lost several short-term mechanisms in favor of constitutive protection against environmental stress. This study investigated the physiological and growth responses of UWO241 to high-light conditions, evaluating the impacts of long-term acclimation to high light, low temperature, and high salinity on its ability to manage short-term photoinhibition. We found that UWO241 significantly increased its growth rate and photosynthetic activity at growth irradiances far exceeding native light conditions. Furthermore, UWO241 exhibited robust protection against short-term photoinhibition, particularly in photosystem I. Lastly, pre-acclimation to high light or low temperatures, but not high salinity, enhanced photoinhibition tolerance. These findings extend our understanding of stress tolerance in extremophilic algae. In the past 2 decades, climate change-related increasing glacial stream flow has perturbed long-term stable conditions, which has been associated with lake level rise, the thinning of ice covers, and the expansion of ice-free perimeters, leading to perturbations in light and salinity conditions. Our findings have implications for phytoplankton survival and the response to change scenarios in the light-limited environment of Antarctic ice-covered lakes.

URLhttps://www.mdpi.com/2223-7747/13/16/2254
DOI10.3390/plants13162254