Tag Archives: roots

For The First Time, Researchers Just Watched How Plants Slurp Up Water

Plants thirst for water, just as we animals do, but exactly how they slurp it through their tissues has remained a bit of a mystery as attempting to see it happening impairs the process.

 

By applying a gentle imaging technique in a new way, University of Nottingham physicist Flavius Pascut and the team were able to watch plants’ innards at work as they drank in real time.

“We’ve developed a way to allow ourselves to watch that process at the level of single cells,” said University of Nottingham electrophysiologist Kevin Webb. “We can not only see the water going up inside the root, but also where and how it travels around.”

Not only is the water itself essential to the plants, it also acts as a vehicle for transporting other nutrients, minerals, and important biomolecules throughout the living structures. How efficiently plants are able to move the precious liquid around can have a huge effect on their ability to tolerate harsh environmental conditions.

“To observe water uptake in living plants without damaging them, we have applied a sensitive, laser-based, optical microscopy technique to see water movement inside living roots non-invasively, which has never been done before,” explained Webb.

By detecting how light photons scatter from a narrow laser source, Raman microspectroscopy provides real time, molecular level imaging, under natural conditions, without the need for molecular labeling.

 

This technique is so sensitive that it can detect the mass and orientation of molecular bonds. This means that contrast can be provided by using molecules that stand out from their surroundings – in this case, deuterium oxide, known as heavy water, in place of normal water. Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen that has a neutron as well as normal hydrogen’s usual lone proton, doubling its mass.

While heavy water has slightly different properties, it’s similar enough to normal water not to change things physiologically in small amounts.

The scan detected a pulse of the heavy water within 80 seconds of exposing the roots of researchers’ most thoroughly studied plant, thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana). Pascut and the team alternated between exposing the flowering plant to normal water and heavy water to watch how new water moved through the plant tissues.

Curiously, researchers only detected the sucked-up water in the inner part of the roots, where the water transporting root tissues xylem occurs, showing this initial water uptake is not shared to surrounding tissues on its way up from the roots to the rest of the plant.

 

The researchers think this means that there are “two water worlds” within the plant and that the second system of water diffusion distributes water to these outer tissues.

Being able to observe this process will help us understand it and better plan crops for the tumultuous future we’re facing.

“The goal is to increase global food productivity by understanding and using plant varieties with the best chances of survival that can be most productive in any given environment, no matter how dry or wet,” said Webb.

Pascut and the team are developing a portable version of the imaging technology to allow for more accessible field studies, and they also believe this technique could be used in healthcare monitoring devices, although our cells are much smaller than plants’.

For now, though, “this promises to help us address important questions such as – how do plants ‘sense’ water availability?” explained University of Nottingham plant scientist Malcolm Bennett.

“Answers to this question are vital for designing future crops better adapted to the challenges we face with climate change and altered weather patterns.”

This research was published in Nature Communications.

 

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Acura’s redesigned MDX SUV returns to the brand’s roots

Now must be an interesting time—in the Pratchettian sense—to be a car maker. All you want to do is sell vehicles, but there are economic downturns and the occasional pandemic to factor in. Around the world, climate change policies are heavily favoring electric-powered machines, at least in Europe and China, and a Californian upstart has embarrassed all the usual players in the process. And on top of that, all your customers are bored with the cars they used to buy—everything has to be a crossover or an SUV, preferably with Wi-Fi.

In Acura’s case, the company has had to deal with all of the above while going through something like a midlife crisis. After decades competing for sales with Lexus and Infiniti, Honda’s North American spinoff decided to engage in some soul-searching to see whether that’s really where its efforts should be spent. And Acura decided that instead of focusing on luxury, it needed to return to its roots as a performance brand.

In the past, the Japanese luxury brands were seen as a rung below their German competitors, particularly in terms of driving dynamics, mostly due to the preponderance of front-wheel-drive platforms. But if Acura’s plan was to dislodge BMW as the driver’s choice, the MDX is the SUV to do it. Particularly the version it sent us for 48 hours—a $57,100 2022 MDX A-Spec. A-Spec, in addition to being something to do with Gran Turismo, is also Acura-code for “this is the one that handles really well,” a bit like those BMWs you see with M Sport badges.

This redesign makes the 2022 the fourth generation of SUV to wear the MDX badge, and our test example looked resplendent in its Performance Red Pearl paint. (It’s a similar shade to Mazda’s Soul Red but maybe a little deeper.) Head-on, the new MDX is a less fussy shape than the model it replaces, with the front dominated by a larger Acura grille and badge that conceals some of the SUV’s forward-looking sensors. However, those black intakes on either side of the grille are actually blanked off, even on this variant—apparently, testing showed it was better if those vents were permanently closed. (The main grille also has active shutters that close to reduce drag when needed.)

A staff car for an up-and-coming Imperial officer?

A return to performance for Acura doesn’t mean trading away a luxurious interior for something spartan. Darth Vader would probably be a fan of the MDX A-Spec’s interior, with its black-on-black ultrasuede and leather, red stitching, and glossy black panels. Acura says that 30 percent of the polyester that is turned into ultrasuede comes from molasses that’s produced as a byproduct from sugar refining, which is the kind of nerdy fact that one day might come in handy.

Behind Acura’s latest multifunction steering wheel, a 12.3-inch digital display replaces the physical dials you might find in a TLX sedan. It changes appearance depending on upon the drive mode, and in the middle of the display is an informative graphical representation of what the sensors are seeing around the MDX.

The infotainment system is the latest iteration of Acura’s True Touchpad Interface, first seen on the RDX crossover. It uses a touchpad on the center console that has a 1:1 relationship with the screen—if (for example) an icon or UI element is at the top-right of the screen, you tap the top-right of the touchpad to touch it. There’s a little more of a learning curve than with using a normal touchscreen- or trackpad-based UI, but with a few hours of familiarity, you’ll quickly appreciate how easy it is to operate without taking your eyes off the road.

There are plenty of USB ports (five, or seven if you opt instead for the MDX Advance, which also gets a full-color, 10.2-inch heads-up display) and a wireless charging pad, and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto both work wirelessly (although, as ever, you might find using a cable to a more bug-free experience).

The middle row of seats slides 5.9 inches (150 mm) front and back, and it comes with a party trick—you can remove the middle seat. Removing the seat means you can only carry six onboard, and you’ll want to leave the middle seat at home. But it does make entry to the third row a lot more practical.

Stay on target

The new MDX has gained a great degree of chassis stiffness in search of better handling, mostly through the use of high-strength steels in strategic locations. The double-wishbone front suspension is new and suggests this SUV means business; there’s also a new multilink rear suspension design at the back. And I must say, the engineers have succeeded—this is a fine-handling SUV, which bodes well for the more powerful MDX Type-S that is in the pipeline.

Its curb weight of 4,534 lbs (2,056 kg) is standard for the class, but MDX’s poise and body control marks it as one of the clever kids sitting up front. There’s none of the lag between input and reaction that afflicts many SUVs (or even the Acura TLX sedan I tested recently), and the SH-AWD system vectors torque effectively from front to rear and, at the rear axle, from side to side, all of which helps you change direction more quickly.

Sadly, there is but a single choice of powertrain for the new MDX, a 290 hp (217 kW), 267 lb-ft (362 Nm) variant of the company’s 3.5 L 60-degree V6, coupled to a 10-speed automatic transmission. It’s rated at 21 mpg (11.2 l/100km) combined, which it slightly exceeded (I got 21.8), but it is nonetheless disappointing to report that there’s no hybrid MDX for this generation. When I double-checked this omission with Acura, the company said it still loved electrification, which is not only good for the planet but also performance, and referred me to the very competent NSX supercar as proof of that.

Listing image by Acura

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Time-lapse reveals the hidden dance of roots

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Duke researchers have been studying something that happens too slowly for our eyes to see. A team in biologist Philip Benfey’s lab wanted to see how plant roots burrow into the soil. So they set up a camera on rice seeds sprouting in clear gel, taking a new picture every 15 minutes for several days after germination.

When they played their footage back at 15 frames per second, compressing 100 hours of growth into less than a minute, they saw that rice roots use a trick to gain their first foothold in the soil: their growing tips make corkscrew-like motions, waggling and winding in a helical path.

By using their time-lapse footage, along with a root-like robot to test ideas, the researchers gained new insights into how and why plant root tips twirl as they grow.

The first clue came from something else the team noticed: some roots can’t do the corkscrew dance. The culprit, they found, is a mutation in a gene called HK1 that makes them grow straight down, instead of circling and meandering like other roots do.

The team also noted that the mutant roots grew twice as deep as normal ones. Which raised a question: “What does the more typical spiraling tip growth do for the plant?” said Isaiah Taylor, a postdoctoral associate in Benfey’s lab at Duke.






New time-lapse videos capture something that’s too slow for our eyes to see: the growing tips of rice roots make corkscrew-like motions, waggling and winding in a helical path as they burrow into the soil. By using time-lapse footage, along with a root-like robot to test ideas, researchers have gained new insights into how and why plant root tips twirl as they grow. Credit: Footage courtesy of Benfey/Goldman labs. Produced by Veronique Koch.

Winding movements in plants were “a phenomenon that fascinated Charles Darwin,” even 150 years ago, Benfey said. In the case of shoots, there’s an obvious utility: twining and circling makes it easier to get a grip as they climb towards the sunlight. But how and why it happens in roots was more of a mystery.

Sprouting seeds have a challenge, the researchers say. If they’re to survive, the first tiny root that emerges has to anchor the plant and probe downwards to suck up the water and nutrients the plant needs to grow.

Which got them thinking: perhaps in root tips this spiral growth is a search strategy—a way to find the best path forward, Taylor said.

In experiments performed in physics professor Daniel Goldman’s lab at Georgia Tech, observations of normal and mutant rice roots growing over a perforated plastic plate revealed that normal spiraling roots were three times more likely to find a hole and grow through to the other side.

Collaborators at Georgia Tech and the University of California, Santa Barbara built a soft pliable robot that unfurls from its tip like a root and set it loose in an obstacle course consisting of unevenly spaced pegs.

To create the robot, the team took two inflatable plastic tubes and nested them inside each other. Changing the air pressure pushed the soft inner tube from the inside out, making the robot elongate from the tip. Contracting opposing pairs of artificial “muscles” made the robot’s tip bend side to side as it grew.

Even without sophisticated sensors or controls, the robotic root was still able to make its way past obstacles and find a path through the pegs. But when the side-to-side bending stopped, the robot quickly got stuck against a peg.

Finally, the team grew normal and mutant rice seeds in a dirt mix used for baseball fields, to test them out on obstacles a root would actually encounter in soil. Sure enough, while the mutants had trouble getting a toehold, the normal roots with spiral-growing tips were able to bore through.

A root tip’s corkscrew growth is coordinated by the plant hormone auxin, a growth substance the researchers think may move around the tip of a growing root in a wave-like pattern. Auxin buildup on one side of the root causes those cells to elongate less than those on the other side, and the root tip bends in that direction.

Plants that carry the HK1 mutation can’t dance because of a defect in how auxin is carried from cell to cell, the researchers found. Block this hormone and roots lose their ability to twirl.

The work helps scientists understand how roots grow in hard, compacted soil.


A plant hormone that speeds root growth could be a new agricultural tool


More information:
Isaiah Taylor et al, Mechanism and function of root circumnutation, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2018940118
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Duke University School of Nursing

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Time-lapse reveals the hidden dance of roots (2021, February 19)
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