Optimality of the Munch mechanism for translocation of sugars in plants

Citation:

Jensen, KH, J Lee, T Bohr, H Bruus, NM Holbrook, and MA Zwieniecki. 2011. “Optimality of the Munch mechanism for translocation of sugars in plants.” J R Soc Interface 8: 1155-65.

Date Published:

Aug 7

Abstract:

Plants require effective vascular systems for the transport of water and dissolved molecules between distal regions. Their survival depends on the ability to transport sugars from the leaves where they are produced to sites of active growth; a flow driven, according to the Munch hypothesis, by osmotic gradients generated by differences in sugar concentration. The length scales over which sugars are produced (Lleaf) and over which they are transported (L(stem)), as well as the radius r of the cylindrical phloem cells through which the transport takes place, vary among species over several orders of magnitude; a major unsettled question is whether the Munch transport mechanism is effective over this wide range of sizes. Optimization of translocation speed predicts a scaling relation between radius r and the characteristic lengths as r approximately (Lleaf Lstem)1/3. Direct measurements using novel in vivo techniques and biomimicking microfluidic devices support this scaling relation and provide the first quantitative support for a unified mechanism of sugar translocation in plants spanning several orders of magnitude in size. The existence of a general scaling law for phloem dimensions provides a new framework for investigating the physical principles governing the morphological diversity of plants.

Notes:

Jensen, K HLee, JBohr, TBruus, HHolbrook, N MZwieniecki, M AengResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tEngland2011/01/20 06:00J R Soc Interface. 2011 Aug 7;8(61):1155-65. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2010.0578. Epub 2011 Jan 18.

Last updated on 03/25/2015