Scientists discover oxygen tug-of-war in plant cells

Researchers at the University of Helsinki have found that mitochondria in plant cells can draw oxygen away from chloroplasts, revealing a new interaction that affects photosynthesis and stress responses. This discovery, published in Plant Physiology, explains how plants manage internal oxygen levels. The study used genetically modified Arabidopsis thaliana plants to observe these processes.

A team led by Dr. Alexey Shapiguzov at the University of Helsinki's Centre of Excellence in Tree Biology has identified a previously unknown mechanism in plant cells. Mitochondria, which produce energy through respiration, can actively reduce oxygen levels around chloroplasts, the sites of photosynthesis. This oxygen exchange alters how plants handle reactive oxygen species and adapt to environmental stresses.

The research focused on Arabidopsis thaliana, a model plant, with versions genetically modified to have mitochondrial defects that activate alternative respiratory enzymes. These modifications increased oxygen consumption by mitochondria, leading to lower oxygen in plant tissues. As a result, chloroplasts showed resistance to methyl viologen, a chemical that typically generates reactive oxygen species by diverting electrons to oxygen.

Experiments under low-oxygen conditions, created by exposing plants to nitrogen gas, further confirmed the interaction. Electron transfer to oxygen decreased sharply, indicating insufficient oxygen availability for the chemical's action. Dr. Shapiguzov stated, "to our knowledge, this is the first evidence that mitochondria influence chloroplasts through intracellular oxygen exchange."

Oxygen plays a key role in plant metabolism, growth, immune responses, and stress adaptation, including wound healing. While photosynthesis releases oxygen and respiration consumes it, the direct influence between these organelles was not previously understood. This finding could enhance predictions of plant responses to changes like day-night cycles or flooding.

The discovery may improve tools for measuring plant physiology, aiding early stress detection in crops and supporting breeding efforts. The study was published in Plant Physiology in 2026.

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Realistic illustration of spinning hemozoin crystals inside a malaria parasite propelled by hydrogen peroxide reactions, like tiny rockets.
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Scientists identify a rocket-fuel-like reaction that propels spinning iron crystals inside malaria parasites

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University of Utah researchers report that iron-rich hemozoin crystals inside the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum move through the parasite’s digestive compartment because reactions involving hydrogen peroxide at the crystal surface generate chemical propulsion. The work, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, links a long-observed phenomenon to peroxide chemistry and could point to new antimalarial drug strategies and ideas for engineered micro- and nanoscale devices.

Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have discovered that some Asgard archaea, close relatives of complex life's ancestors, can tolerate and use oxygen. This finding resolves a long-standing puzzle about how oxygen-dependent and oxygen-avoiding microbes formed the partnership that led to eukaryotes. The evidence, published in Nature, suggests complex life emerged in oxygenated environments after the Great Oxidation Event.

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An international team including researchers from Cornell University, the Boyce Thompson Institute, the University of Edinburgh, and others has uncovered how hornwort plants use a modified protein, RbcS-STAR, to cluster the key photosynthetic enzyme Rubisco into pyrenoid-like compartments. This mechanism boosts carbon capture and could enhance crop yields by up to 60 percent while reducing needs for water and fertilizers.

Researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University have discovered that light exposure increases adhesion between the outer skin and inner tissues of young pea stems through accumulation of p-coumaric acid. This reinforcement bolsters plant structure but restricts expansion and growth. The findings, published in Physiologia Plantarum, suggest potential applications for improving crop resilience.

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Researchers at the University of California, Riverside say they have developed a flexible, battery-powered gel patch that generates oxygen inside hard-to-heal wounds—an approach aimed at countering deep-tissue oxygen deprivation that can stall recovery and contribute to amputations. In experiments in diabetic and older mice, the team reported that wounds that often remained open—and were sometimes fatal—closed in about 23 days when treated with the oxygen-generating patch.

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