Biotechnology Bulletin ›› 2025, Vol. 41 ›› Issue (10): 64-71.doi: 10.13560/j.cnki.biotech.bull.1985.2025-0549

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Advances in the Study of Photoprotection in Plant Photosynthesis

CHEN Li-chao(), YANG Xue-lian, LI Wen-jie, SHI Yan-yun, ZHANG Li-xin, XU Xiu-mei()   

  1. State Key Laboratory of Crop Stress Adaptation and Improvement, Henan Province and Ministry of Science and Technology, Key Laboratory of Synthetic Biology and Biomanufacturing of Henan Province, School of Life Sciences, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000
  • Received:2025-05-30 Online:2025-10-26 Published:2025-10-28
  • Contact: XU Xiu-mei E-mail:lcchen@henu.edu.cn;xuxiumei@vip.henu.edu.cn

Abstract:

Photosynthesis is the foundation of plant growth and yield formation. Light provides the energy for plant photosynthesis, but excessive light can cause photoinhibition, leading to reduced photosynthetic efficiency or even photo-oxidative damage, which is particularly severe under stress conditions such as drought, high temperature, and low temperature. In response to photoinhibition, plants have evolved a variety of photoprotective mechanisms, including chloroplast movement, non-photochemical quenching, reactive oxygen species scavenging, cyclic electron transport, and PSII damage repair. The movement of chloroplasts affects the absorption of light energy through the adjustment of leaf posture and the change of chloroplast position, so as to achieve the adaptation to high light. Non-photochemical quenching dissipates excess light energy as heat to prevent PSII damage. The ROS scavenging system mitigates oxidative damage. Cyclic electron flow regulates energy balance and excitation energy distribution between photosystems, playing a key role in photoprotection. The efficient PSII repair mechanism helps plants maintain photosynthetic efficiency under stress. Recent research has enhanced our understanding of these mechanisms, providing new ideas for breeding high-photosynthetic-efficiency crop varieties. Future research should focus on field experiments to explore the role of photoprotection in natural conditions and the molecular basis and regulatory networks of photoprotective mechanisms, which is expected to provide theoretical basis and data support for cultivating new crop varieties with high yield, high quality and stress resistance.

Key words: photosynthesis, photodamage, photoinhibition, photoprotection