The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons

It is unclear whether light affects the structure and activity of exogenous secretory tissues like glandular hairs. Therefore, transmission electron microscopy was first used to study plastid differentiation in glandular hairs and leaves of light-grown rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis “Arp”) plants...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrea Böszörményi, Adrienn Dobi, Anna Skribanek, Melinda Pávai, Katalin Solymosi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2020.00196/full
id doaj-f23e9c9280ac4a6a9747537923b890c0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f23e9c9280ac4a6a9747537923b890c02020-11-25T00:29:07ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2020-03-011110.3389/fpls.2020.00196493537The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and CotyledonsAndrea Böszörményi0Adrienn Dobi1Anna Skribanek2Melinda Pávai3Katalin Solymosi4Department of Pharmacognosy, Semmelweis University, Budapest, HungaryDepartment of Plant Anatomy, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, HungaryDepartment of Biology, ELTE Savaria University Centre, Szombathely, HungaryDepartment of Plant Anatomy, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, HungaryDepartment of Plant Anatomy, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, HungaryIt is unclear whether light affects the structure and activity of exogenous secretory tissues like glandular hairs. Therefore, transmission electron microscopy was first used to study plastid differentiation in glandular hairs and leaves of light-grown rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis “Arp”) plants kept for 2 weeks under ambient light conditions. During our detailed analyses, among others, we found leucoplasts with tubuloreticular membrane structures resembling prolamellar bodies in stalk cell plastids of peltate glandular hairs. To study the effect of darkness on plastid differentiation, we then dark-forced adult, light-grown rosemary plants for 2 weeks and observed occasionally the development of new shoots with elongated internodes and pale leaves on them. Absorption and fluorescence spectroscopic analyses of the chlorophyllous pigment contents, the native arrangement of the pigment-protein complexes and photosynthetic activity confirmed that the first and second pairs of leaf primordia of dark-forced shoots were partially etiolated (contained low amounts of protochlorophyll/ide and residual chlorophylls, had etio-chloroplasts with prolamellar bodies and low grana, and impaired photosynthesis). Darkness did not influence plastid structure in fifth leaves or secretory tissues (except for head cells of peltate glandular hairs in which rarely tubuloreticular membranes appeared). The mesophyll cells of cotyledons of 2-week-old dark-germinated rosemary seedlings contained etioplasts with highly regular prolamellar bodies similar to those in mesophyll etio-chloroplasts of leaves and clearly differing from tubuloreticular membranes of secretory cells. Analyses of the essential oil composition obtained after solid phase microextraction and gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy showed that in addition to light, the age of the studied organ (i.e., first leaf primordia and leaf tip vs. fifth, fully developed green leaves) and the type of the organ (cotyledon vs. leaves) also strongly influenced the essential oil composition. Therefore, light conditions and developmental stage are both important factors to be considered in case of potential therapeutic, culinary or aromatic uses of rosemary leaves and their essential oils.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2020.00196/fulldark-forcingetiolationleucoplastpeltate glandular hairprolamellar bodyrosemary
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Böszörményi
Adrienn Dobi
Anna Skribanek
Melinda Pávai
Katalin Solymosi
spellingShingle Andrea Böszörményi
Adrienn Dobi
Anna Skribanek
Melinda Pávai
Katalin Solymosi
The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons
Frontiers in Plant Science
dark-forcing
etiolation
leucoplast
peltate glandular hair
prolamellar body
rosemary
author_facet Andrea Böszörményi
Adrienn Dobi
Anna Skribanek
Melinda Pávai
Katalin Solymosi
author_sort Andrea Böszörményi
title The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons
title_short The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons
title_full The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons
title_fullStr The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Light on Plastid Differentiation, Chlorophyll Biosynthesis, and Essential Oil Composition in Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) Leaves and Cotyledons
title_sort effect of light on plastid differentiation, chlorophyll biosynthesis, and essential oil composition in rosemary (rosmarinus officinalis) leaves and cotyledons
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description It is unclear whether light affects the structure and activity of exogenous secretory tissues like glandular hairs. Therefore, transmission electron microscopy was first used to study plastid differentiation in glandular hairs and leaves of light-grown rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis “Arp”) plants kept for 2 weeks under ambient light conditions. During our detailed analyses, among others, we found leucoplasts with tubuloreticular membrane structures resembling prolamellar bodies in stalk cell plastids of peltate glandular hairs. To study the effect of darkness on plastid differentiation, we then dark-forced adult, light-grown rosemary plants for 2 weeks and observed occasionally the development of new shoots with elongated internodes and pale leaves on them. Absorption and fluorescence spectroscopic analyses of the chlorophyllous pigment contents, the native arrangement of the pigment-protein complexes and photosynthetic activity confirmed that the first and second pairs of leaf primordia of dark-forced shoots were partially etiolated (contained low amounts of protochlorophyll/ide and residual chlorophylls, had etio-chloroplasts with prolamellar bodies and low grana, and impaired photosynthesis). Darkness did not influence plastid structure in fifth leaves or secretory tissues (except for head cells of peltate glandular hairs in which rarely tubuloreticular membranes appeared). The mesophyll cells of cotyledons of 2-week-old dark-germinated rosemary seedlings contained etioplasts with highly regular prolamellar bodies similar to those in mesophyll etio-chloroplasts of leaves and clearly differing from tubuloreticular membranes of secretory cells. Analyses of the essential oil composition obtained after solid phase microextraction and gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy showed that in addition to light, the age of the studied organ (i.e., first leaf primordia and leaf tip vs. fifth, fully developed green leaves) and the type of the organ (cotyledon vs. leaves) also strongly influenced the essential oil composition. Therefore, light conditions and developmental stage are both important factors to be considered in case of potential therapeutic, culinary or aromatic uses of rosemary leaves and their essential oils.
topic dark-forcing
etiolation
leucoplast
peltate glandular hair
prolamellar body
rosemary
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2020.00196/full
work_keys_str_mv AT andreaboszormenyi theeffectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT adrienndobi theeffectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT annaskribanek theeffectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT melindapavai theeffectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT katalinsolymosi theeffectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT andreaboszormenyi effectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT adrienndobi effectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT annaskribanek effectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT melindapavai effectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
AT katalinsolymosi effectoflightonplastiddifferentiationchlorophyllbiosynthesisandessentialoilcompositioninrosemaryrosmarinusofficinalisleavesandcotyledons
_version_ 1725333241826639872