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Pierrick Bru, PhD student at the Department of Plant Physiology and Umeå Plant Science Centre. Photo: Alexis Brun
Pierrick Bru, PhD student at the Department of Plant Physiology and Umeå Plant Science Centre. Photo: Alexis Brun

Press release -

A sun protection mechanism helps plants to survive

Just like people can get sunburned, plants can also suffer from too much sunlight. To stay healthy, they use an internal “sun protection mechanism”. Pierrick Bru, a PhD student working with Alizée Malnoë at Umeå Plant Science Centre and Umeå University, has been studying a special component of this mechanism, called qH, and has found that it is quite adaptable.

The magic of photosynthetic organisms is that they can produce energy from sunlight. Plants have tiny structures in their cells, that, similarly to mini solar panels, catch sunlight and turn it into energy-rich compounds which the plant is then utilizing to grow and stay healthy.

However, when there is too much light, these structures can get overloaded and damaged. To prevent this from occuring, plants use a mechanism which converts excess sunlight into heat, allowing it to dissipate harmlessly.

“In our research we focused on qH which is one of the components of this mechanisms. This component does not work quickly. It takes hours to turn on and off, and it is mainly active when plants are under prolonged excess of light stress, especially when combined with other environmental clues such as cold and/or drought,” says Pierrick Bru.

To understand more about qH, Pierrick and his colleagues used the plant model organism Arabidopsis thaliana to conduct experiments. They modified the plant by removing one or more of the mini solar panels and found that the plant has a backup system: if one panel is missing, the others can compensate for it. However, when a particular small panel, known as Lhcb6, is not present, qH could not work properly and less of the excess sunlight was turned into heat.

The researchers have also investigated other actors that control the qH mechanism. They found that two of these actors are involved in building or repairing photosystem II – one of the two functional units where photosynthesis takes place. If either of the two actors found did not work well, photosystem II could not function as usual. This deficiency also caused problems for the plants ability to use qH sun protection mechanism.

Pierrick Bru and his colleagues will continue investigating how exactly the defects of photosystem II impact the qH protection mechanism. This understanding will open doors to investigate if photoprotection qH is regulated similarly in crops.

“Crops are suffering already now from more extreme weather conditions caused by climate change. This will affect our capacity to grow healthy crops and good food for the increased population. Understanding how qH works and how plants cope with environmental stress will help to find ways to improve plant resistance to excess of sunlight, improving plant growth and increase agriculture productivity,” says Pierrick Bru.

About the public defence

Pierrick Bru, Umeå Plant Science Centre / Department of Plant Physiology, Umeå University, defends his PhD thesis with the title Investigating the molecular mechanism of photoprotection qH, in Arabidopsis thaliana on Friday, 8 December 2023. The defence will take place at 09.00 in KBE301 Lilla hörsalen in the KBC-building, Umeå University. Faculty opponent is Stefano Caffarri, Department of Biology, Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, France. The thesis was supervised by Alizée Malnoë.

Read the full thesis

For more information, please contact:

Pierrick Bru, Umeå Plant Science Centre / Department of Plant Physiology, Umeå University

Phone: +46 70 013 49 33

Email: pierrick.bru@umu.se

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Umeå University
Umeå University is one of Sweden’s largest institutions of higher education with over 37,000 students and 4,300 faculty and staff. The university is home to a wide range of high-quality education programmes and world-class research in a number of fields. Umeå University was also where the revolutionary gene-editing tool CRISPR-Cas9 was discovered that has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

At Umeå University, distances are short. The university's unified campus encourages academic meetings, an exchange of ideas and interdisciplinary co-operation, and promotes a dynamic and open culture in which students and staff rejoice in the success of others.

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