Leaf energy balance requires mitochondrial respiration and export of chloroplast NADPH in the light

Key aspects of leaf mitochondrial metabolism in the light remain unresolved. For example, there is debate about the relative importance of exporting reducing equivalents from mitochondria for the peroxisomal steps of photorespiration versus oxidation of NADH to generate ATP by oxidative phosphorylat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shameer, S, Ratcliffe, RG, Sweetlove, LJ
Format: Journal article
Published: American Society of Plant Biologists 2019
Description
Summary:Key aspects of leaf mitochondrial metabolism in the light remain unresolved. For example, there is debate about the relative importance of exporting reducing equivalents from mitochondria for the peroxisomal steps of photorespiration versus oxidation of NADH to generate ATP by oxidative phosphorylation. Here, we address this and explore energetic coupling between organelles in the light using a diel flux balance analysis model. The model included >600 reactions of central metabolism with full stoichiometric accounting of energy production and consumption. Different scenarios of energy availability (light intensity) and demand (source leaf versus a growing leaf) were considered and the model was constrained by the non-linear relationship between light and CO2 assimilation rate. The analysis demonstrated that the chloroplast can theoretically generate sufficient ATP to satisfy the energy requirements of the rest of the cell in addition to its own. However, this requires unrealistic high light use efficiency and, in practice, the availability of chloroplast-derived ATP is limited by chloroplast energy dissipation systems, such as non-photochemical quenching, and the capacity of the chloroplast ATP export shuttles. Given these limitations, substantial mitochondrial ATP synthesis is required to fulfil cytosolic ATP requirements, with only minimal, or zero, export of mitochondrial reducing equivalents. The analysis also revealed the importance of exporting reducing equivalents from chloroplasts to sustain photorespiration. Hence, the chloroplast malate valve and triose phosphate - 3-phosphoglycerate shuttle are predicted to have important metabolic roles, in addition to their more commonly discussed contribution to the avoidance of photo-oxidative stress.