# Diclofenac Interacts with Photosynthetic Apparatus: Isolated Spinach Chloroplasts and Thylakoids as a Model System

**Authors:** Monika Majewska, Małgorzata Kapusta, Anna Aksmann

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/plants13162189 · Plants · 2024-08-08

## TL;DR

This study shows that diclofenac, a common drug, harms photosynthesis in spinach by damaging chloroplast membranes and reducing photosynthetic efficiency.

## Contribution

The study reveals a new non-specific interaction of diclofenac with photosynthetic membranes, previously unreported structural degradation in chloroplasts.

## Key findings

- Isolated thylakoids are more sensitive to diclofenac than intact chloroplasts.
- Diclofenac causes structural degradation of chloroplasts, observed via confocal microscopy.
- The drug disrupts photosynthesis by transforming PSII reaction centers into heat sinks.

## Abstract

Diclofenac, often detected in environmental samples, poses a potential hazard to the aquatic environment. The present study aimed to understand the effect of this drug on photosynthetic apparatus, which is a little-known aspect of its phytotoxicity. Chloroplasts and thylakoids isolated from spinach (Spinacia oleracea) were used for this study and treated with various concentrations of diclofenac (from 125 to 4000 μM). The parameters of chlorophyll a fluorescence (the OJIP test) as measurements for both the intact chloroplasts and the thylakoid membranes revealed that isolated thylakoids showed greater sensitivity to the drug than chloroplasts. The relatively high concentration of diclofenac that is required to inhibit chloroplast and thylakoid functions suggests a narcotic effect of that drug on photosynthetic membranes, rather than a specific interaction with a particular element of the electron transport chain. Using confocal microscopy, we confirmed the degradation of the chloroplast structure after DCF treatment, which has not been previously reported in the literature. In conclusion, it can be assumed that diclofenac’s action originated from a non-specific interaction with photosynthetic membranes, leading to the disruption in the function of the electron transport chain. This, in turn, decreases the efficiency of photosynthesis, transforming part of the PSII reaction centers into heat sinks and enhancing non-photochemical energy dissipation.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** diclofenac (PubChem CID 3033)
- **Species:** Spinacia oleracea (taxon 3562)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** narcotic (MESH:D000079524)
- **Chemicals:** chlorophyll a (-), Diclofenac (MESH:D004008), DCF (MESH:D015649)
- **Species:** Spinacia oleracea (spinach, species) [taxon 3562]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11359304/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11359304