نتایج جستجو برای: optimal stomatal regulation

تعداد نتایج: 914757  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
Jian Mao Yan-Chun Zhang Yi Sang Qing-Hua Li Hong-Quan Yang

Cryptochromes (CRY) are blue light photoreceptors that mediate various light-induced responses in plants and animals. Arabidopsis CRY (CRY1 and CRY2) functions through negatively regulating constitutive photomorphogenic (COP) 1, a repressor of photomorphogenesis. Water evaporation and photosynthesis are regulated by the stomatal pores in plants, which are closed in darkness but open in response...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2015
Mingyue Gou Zemin Zhang Ning Zhang Quansheng Huang Jacqueline Monaghan Huijun Yang Zhenying Shi Cyril Zipfel Jian Hua

The plant immune system consists of multiple layers of responses targeting various phases of pathogen infection. Here, we provide evidence showing that two responses, one controlling stomatal closure and the other mediated by intracellular receptor proteins, can be regulated by the same proteins but in an antagonistic manner. The HEAT SHOCK COGNATE70 (HSC70), while previously known as a negativ...

2017
William R L Anderegg Adam Wolf Adriana Arango-Velez Brendan Choat Daniel J Chmura Steven Jansen Thomas Kolb Shan Li Frederick Meinzer Pilar Pita Víctor Resco de Dios John S Sperry Brett T Wolfe Stephen Pacala

Climate change is expected to lead to increases in drought frequency and severity, with deleterious effects on many ecosystems. Stomatal responses to changing environmental conditions form the backbone of all ecosystem models, but are based on empirical relationships and are not well-tested during drought conditions. Here, we use a dataset of 34 woody plant species spanning global forest biomes...

2012
Erin T Hamanishi Barb R Thomas Malcolm M Campbell

Much is known about the physiological control of stomatal aperture as a means by which plants adjust to water availability. By contrast, the role played by the modulation of stomatal development to limit water loss has received much less attention. The control of stomatal development in response to water deprivation in the genus Populus is explored here. Drought induced declines in stomatal con...

Journal: :Plant, cell & environment 2016
Kimberly A Novick Chelcy F Miniat James M Vose

We merge concepts from stomatal optimization theory and cohesion-tension theory to examine the dynamics of three mechanisms that are potentially limiting to leaf-level gas exchange in trees during drought: (1) a 'demand limitation' driven by an assumption of optimal stomatal functioning; (2) 'hydraulic limitation' of water movement from the roots to the leaves; and (3) 'non-stomatal' limitation...

2000
John S. Sperry

Stomatal conductance (gs) and transpiration (E) are often positively correlated with the hydraulic conductance of the soil–leaf continuum (ks–l). Interaction between gs and ks–l helps regulate water potential (9) of leaves. When soil and plant 9 decreases during water stress, ks–l decreases. A well-documented cause of the decrease in ks–l is xylem cavitation. The interaction between k and 9 in ...

2013
Agata Daszkowska-Golec Iwona Szarejko

Two highly specialized cells, the guard cells that surround the stomatal pore, are able to integrate environmental and endogenous signals in order to control the stomatal aperture and thereby the gas exchange. The uptake of CO2 is associated with a loss of water by leaves. Control of the size of the stomatal aperture optimizes the efficiency of water use through dynamic changes in the turgor of...

Journal: :Current Biology 2005
Eleonora Cominelli Massimo Galbiati Alain Vavasseur Lucio Conti Tea Sala Marnik Vuylsteke Nathalie Leonhardt Stephen L. Dellaporta Chiara Tonelli

Stomatal pores located on the plant epidermis regulate CO(2) uptake for photosynthesis and the loss of water by transpiration. The opening and closing of the pore is mediated by turgor-driven volume changes of two surrounding guard cells. These highly specialized cells integrate internal signals and environmental stimuli to modulate stomatal aperture for plant survival under diverse conditions....

2014
Stuart A. Casson Alistair M. Hetherington

Stomata are pores found on the surfaces of leaves, and they regulate gas exchange between the plant and the environment [1]. Stomatal development is highly plastic and is influenced by environmental signals [2]. Light stimulates stomatal development, and this response is mediated by plant photoreceptors [3-5], with the red-light photoreceptor phytochrome B (phyB) having a dominant role in white...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2017
Shin-Ichiro Inoue Toshinori Kinoshita

Light-induced stomatal responses were first reported by Darwin (1989). Stomata open in response to light, including blue and red light (Shimazaki et al., 2007). Red light induces stomatal opening via photosynthesis in the mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts (Mott et al., 2008; Suetsugu et al., 2014). In contrast, blue light as a signal induces stomatal opening. Phototropins expressed in guard...

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