Do you mean as long as the Vg2 drops to less then 285v when the current is being pulled down by the signal, all is good—as long as the dissipation is within spec?
The change in B+ voltage under signal conditions in Push-Pull amps is not quite the same as the B+ in SE amps.
In PP Class A, when plate current in one tube decreases, plate current in the other tube increases (This relationship is more-linear for lower-amplitude signals). This 'kind of' evens out the peaks and troughs in B+ voltage at the reservoir cap. However, within each tube, screen current increases (slightly) as plate current increases, and amount of screen current and plate current increase keeps in proportion to the tube's published Ip:Ig2 ratio for the given bias point - and vice versa for the other tube.
But there's another thing going on under big signal conditions which triggers the Class B load line. In Class B, plate current in one tube shuts off for part of the signal cycle (but screen voltage - and screen current - in that tube 'stays the same'), while plate current in the other tube goes beyond (what would otherwise be) a 'sensible' increase. In this condition, the screen current in this other tube also shoots up. So the screen current scenario in Class AB, is that screen current sits at a certain level, but increases during every B-load line phase, and if you don't have a decent screen grid resistor to eat up some of this increase, then things can get ugly. The ugliness thing can happen as plate voltage swing bottoms, if it bottoms out to the left of the 'knee' of the grid curves. This is where plate voltage has gotten so low that the plate current suddenly stops increasing and decreases dramatically. In this condition, screen current increases just as dramatically, and this can spell death for the screen (and the tube). There are a number of ways of preventing this. You can either:
1) decrease the reflected load impedance (which rotates the load line so that it goes through or above the knee of the Vg = 0 grid curve, or
2) cool off the bias, so the load line is 'lowered' (which reduces the power output of the tubes and helps keep them within acceptable dissipation limits, or
3) lower the screen voltage, which lowers the grid curves, so that the knee of the Vg = 0 curve is at or below the load line (and this is why tube manufacturers recommend a maximum screen voltage on tube data sheets), or
4) a combination of one or more of the above three options.
All the above options decrease output power. There's no hard and fast rule. Its merely that as you increase screen voltage more and more, you risk getting into an undesirably high screen current situation. Tubes will take a certain amount of abuse, and some types with manage better than others as you ramp up the operating conditions.