Slow, fast and furious: understanding the physics of plant movements

被引:161
作者
Forterre, Yoel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Aix Marseille, UMR 7343, CNRS, IUSTI, F-13453 Marseille 13, France
关键词
EXPLOSIVE SEED DISPERSAL; VENUS FLYTRAP; TRAP CLOSURE; RAPID MOVEMENTS; ION CHANNELS; CELL-WALLS; IN-VIVO; WATER; MECHANICS; GROWTH;
D O I
10.1093/jxb/ert230
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The ability of plants to move is central to many physiological processes from development to tropisms, from nutrition to reproduction. The movement of plants or plant parts occurs over a wide range of sizes and time scales. This review summarizes the main physical mechanisms plants use to achieve motility, highlighting recent work at the frontier of biology and physics on rapid movements. Emphasis is given to presenting in a single framework pioneering biological studies of water transport and growth with more recent physics research on poroelasticity and mechanical instabilities. First, the basic osmotic and hydration/dehydration motors are described that contribute to movement by growth and reversible swelling/shrinking of cells and tissues. The speeds of these water-driven movements are shown to be ultimately limited by the transport of water through the plant body. Some plant structures overcome this hydraulic limit to achieve much faster movement by using a mechanical instability. The principle is to impose an energy barrier to the system, which can originate from geometrical constraint or matter cohesion, allowing elastic potential energy to be stored until the barrier is overcome, then rapidly transformed into kinetic energy. Three of these rapid motion mechanisms have been elucidated recently and are described here: the snapping traps of two carnivorous plants, the Venus flytrap and Utricularia, and the catapult of fern sporangia. Finally, movement mechanisms are reconsidered in the context of the timescale of important physiological processes at the cellular and molecular level.
引用
收藏
页码:4745 / 4760
页数:16
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