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Passive phloem loading and long-distance transport in a synthetic tree-on-a-chip

Authors :
Comtet, Jean
Jensen, Kaare H.
Turgeon, Robert
Stroock, Abraham D.
Hosoi, A. E.
Source :
Nature Plants 3, 17032 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Vascular plants rely on differences of osmotic pressure to export sugars from regions of synthesis (mature leaves) to sugar sinks (roots, fruits). In this process, known as M\"unch pressure flow, the loading of sugars from photosynthetic cells to the export conduit (the phloem) is crucial, as it sets the pressure head necessary to power long-distance transport. Whereas most herbaceous plants use active mechanisms to increase phloem concentration above that of the photosynthetic cells, in most tree species, for which transport distances are largest, loading seems to occur via passive symplastic diffusion from the mesophyll to the phloem. Here, we use a synthetic microfluidic model of a passive loader to explore the nonlinear dynamics that arise during export and determine the ability of passive loading to drive long-distance transport. We first demonstrate that in our device, phloem concentration is set by the balance between the resistances to diffusive loading from the source and convective export through the phloem. Convection-limited export corresponds to classical models of M\"unch transport, where phloem concentration is close to that of the source; in contrast, diffusion-limited export leads to small phloem concentrations and weak scaling of flow rates with the hydraulic resistance. We then show that the effective regime of convection-limited export is predominant in plants with large transport resistances and low xylem pressures. Moreover, hydrostatic pressures developed in our synthetic passive loader can reach botanically relevant values as high as 10 bars. We conclude that passive loading is sufficient to drive long-distance transport in large plants, and that trees are well suited to take full advantage of passive phloem loading strategies.

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics - Biological Physics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Plants 3, 17032 (2017)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1709.06145
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nplants.2017.32