PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How some leaves got fat: It's the veins

2013-04-11
(Press-News.org) A "garden variety" leaf is a broad, flat structure, but if the garden happens to be somewhere arid, it probably includes succulent plants with plump leaves full of precious water. Fat leaves did not emerge in the plant world easily. A new Brown University study published in Current Biology reports that to sustain efficient photosynthesis, they required the evolution of a fundamental remodeling of leaf vein structure: the addition of a third dimension.

Leaves, after all, are food factories complete with plumbing to transport water and sugar. The farther those veins are from cells performing photosynthesis, the less efficient the process will be. Researchers Erika Edwards, a professor at Brown, and former graduate student Matt Ogburn, wondered how plants managed to evolve fat leaves, given the hydraulic challenges of gaining girth.

Of all plants, Edwards said, maybe succulents could sustain photosynthesis in fat leaves with sparse venation because they store so much water right where it's needed. But she and Ogburn found that even succulents were constrained by 2D veins.

"There must be some kind of a tradeoff in a fat leaf that's really different from most flat leaves," said lead author Ogburn, who is now a postdoctoral fellow at Yale. "There's a benefit to that in storing water in the leaf, but it's going to have a cost to it in terms of the other things the leaf has to do."

To do their study, Ogburn and Edwards looked deep into the catalog of two dry-climate plant groups, Portulacineae and Molluginaceae. They pieced together their evolutionary history, measured the water storage of 83 species, and the vein structure of 42.

Up to a certain level of thickness, leaves retained the planar vein structure of flat leaves. As a consequence, their vein structure was sparser and path lengths were longer – but only up to a point. The researchers discovered that after a certain threshold of thickness, vein structure had evolved to become three dimensional, abandoning the single plane layout of flatter leaves for either an oval or circular orientation in cross-section.

That 3D vein structures independently evolved more than 10 times, in two ways, in just this limited sample of two lineages, suggests that the different vein structure is no coincidence, Ogburn and Edwards said. Instead it seems conclusively to be a functional trait that emerged to allow leaves to become thicker.

"If you had just a 2D-veined pile of species and a 3D-veined pile of species and you didn't know how they were related to each other, you might say, maybe 3D venation just evolved once a long time ago, and had absolutely nothing to do with succulence," Edwards said. "But when you can lay them out on a phylogeny and reconstruct how many times this transition happened- the more times you see this repeated correlation between these two traits the more power you have to say that this is actually adaptive."

The researchers wrote that 2D arrangements of veins, because they produce a low density of veins in thicker leaves, likely imposed a hard limit on leaf thickness. Evolution of 3D veins allowed them to burst through those constraints.

"Increased leaf thickness [when veins are planar] negates the hydraulic benefits of dense leaf venation," Edwards and Ogburn wrote in Current Biology. "It also predicts an upper limit to leaf thickness that would be set by the minimal functional vein density… However, the repeated evolution of 3D venation allowed for further increases in succulence while maintaining moderate hydraulic path lengths."

In other words, leaves became free to be fat, in an evolutionary vein.



INFORMATION:

The National Science Foundation supported the research with grant DEB-1026611.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The mathematical method for simulating the evolution of the solar system has been improved

2013-04-11
In order to improve a simulation designed to study the evolution of the solar system through time, numerical mathematical methods have been developed at the Computing Faculty of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU). Specifically, the methods proposed enable the simulation calculations to be done faster and more accurately. The methodology developed at the UPV/EHU's Computing Faculty is a clear example of interdisciplinarity and collaboration. Indeed, mathematicians, computer scientists, physicists and astronomers have been working together on this task, and ...

Healing by the clock

2013-04-11
Circadian rhythms keep time for all living things, from regulating when plants open their flowers to foiling people when they try to beat jet lag. Day-night cycles are controlled through ancient biological mechanisms, evolutionarily speaking, so in essence, a human has the same internal clock as a fly does. These circadian clocks govern daily rhythms through genes that synchronize molecular pathways that promote or repress protein production, influencing a multitude of body functions. Even before waking, for example, our clock-driven metabolism turns on enzymes and transporters ...

Launch of semi-synthetic artemisinin a milestone for malaria, synthetic biology

2013-04-11
Twelve years after a breakthrough discovery in his University of California, Berkeley, laboratory, professor of chemical engineering Jay Keasling is seeing his dream come true. On April 11, the pharmaceutical company Sanofi will launch the large-scale production of a partially synthetic version of artemisinin, a chemical critical to making today's front-line antimalaria drug, based on Keasling's discovery. The drug is the first triumph of the nascent field of synthetic biology and will be, Keasling hopes, a lifesaver for the hundreds of millions of people in developing ...

Magical survey shows voters are less partisan than indicated by polls

2013-04-11
Traditional opinion polls may severely underestimate the openness for political change among voters, according to research published on 10 April in the open access journal PLOS ONE. Polarisation and partisanship in politics are a constant topic of discussion, and political candidates often believe they must focus their campaign efforts on a small number of swing voters open to ideological change. Based on the wisdom of opinion polls, this might seem like a good idea. But do most voters really hold their political attitudes so firmly that they are unreceptive to persuasion? ...

Diamond as a building material for optical circuits

2013-04-11
This press release is available in German. The application of light for information processing opens up a multitude of possibilities. However, to be able to adequately use photons in circuits and sensors, materials need to have particular optical and mechanical properties. Researchers at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) have now for the first time used polycrystalline diamond to manufacture optical circuits and have published their results online in Nature Communications (DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2710). "Diamond has several properties that allow us to manufacture ...

A new treatment option for alcohol dependence: Reduced consumption rather than abstinence

2013-04-11
Philadelphia, PA, April 11, 2013 – A potential new treatment for alcoholism called nalmefene is effective and safe for reducing alcohol consumption in alcohol dependent individuals, says a new study published this week in Biological Psychiatry. Traditionally, abstinence has been regarded as the primary treatment goal for alcohol dependence, and current pharmacological treatments for alcoholism are approved only for relapse prevention. However, relapse rates remain high and a goal of abstinence is unacceptable to many patients. To address these concerns and provide opportunities ...

LSUHSC research discovers new drug target for metastatic breast cancer

2013-04-11
New Orleans, LA – Research led by Dr. Suresh Alahari, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, is the first to report that two specific tumor suppressor genes work in concert to inhibit the growth and spread of breast tumor cells to the lungs. The research is published this week online in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Working in a mouse model, the LSUHSC research team studied LKB1, an enzyme that functions as a tumor suppressor in the small intestine, and Nischarin, a novel protein that regulates breast cancer cell ...

Information technology amplifies irrational group behavior

2013-04-11
Web tools and social media are our key sources of information when we make decisions as citizens and consumers. But these information technologies can mislead us by magnifying social processes that distort facts and make us act contrary to our own interests – such as buying property at wildly inflated prices because we are led to believe that everybody else is. New research from the University of Copenhagen, which has just been published in the journal Metaphilosophy, combines formal philosophy, social psychology, and decision theory to understand and tackle these phenomena. "Group ...

New findings on the brain's immune cells during Alzheimer's disease progression

2013-04-11
The plaque deposits in the brain of Alzheimer's patients are surrounded by the brain's own immune cells, the microglia. This was already recognized by Alois Alzheimer more than one hundred years ago. But until today it still remains unclear what role microglia play in Alzheimer's disease. Do they help to break down the plaque deposit? A study by researchers of the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch and Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin has now shed light on these mysterious microglia during the progression of Alzheimer's disease. (PLOS One, ...

Interactions between drugs can also be measured at lowest doses

2013-04-11
Clinical pharmacologists at Heidelberg University Hospital have achieved major progress for improving the reliability of drugs. In a pharmacological study, they showed for the first time that interactions between drugs can be detected with minute doses in the range of nanograms. However, at these low doses, the drugs are neither effective nor do they have side effects. This means that studies on interactions occurring in drug combinations can be conducted practically without posing risks or negative impacts on the participants. This is true not only for healthy volunteers, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

First ‘Bible map’ published 500 years ago still influences how we think about borders

Why metabolism matters in Fanconi anemia

Caribbean rainfall driven by shifting long-term patterns in the Atlantic high-pressure system, study finds

Potential treatment to bypass resistance in deadly childhood cancer

RSV vaccines could offer protection against asthma

Group 13 elements: the lucky number for sustainable redox agents?

Africa’s forests have switched from absorbing to emitting carbon, new study finds

Scientists develop plastics that can break down, tackling pollution

What is that dog taking? CBD supplements could make dogs less aggressive over time, study finds

Reducing human effort in rating software

Robots that rethink: A SMU project on self-adaptive embodied AI

Collaborating for improved governance

The 'black box' of nursing talent’s ebb and flow

Leading global tax research from Singapore: The strategic partnership between SMU and the Tax Academy of Singapore

SMU and South Korea to create seminal AI deepfake detection tool

Strengthening international scientific collaboration: Diamond to host SESAME delegation from Jordan

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise

Ancient DNA reveals a North African origin and late dispersal of domestic cats

Inhibiting a master regulator of aging regenerates joint cartilage in mice

Metronome-trained monkeys can tap to the beat of human music

Platform-independent experiment shows tweaking X’s feed can alter political attitudes

Satellite data reveal the seasonal dynamics and vulnerabilities of Earth’s glaciers

Social media research tool can lower political temperature. It could also lead to more user control over algorithms.

Bird flu viruses are resistant to fever, making them a major threat to humans

Study: New protocol for Treg expansion uses targeted immunotherapy to reduce transplant complications

Psychology: Instagram users overestimate social media addiction

Climate change: Major droughts linked to ancient Indus Valley Civilization’s collapse

Hematological and biochemical serum markers in breast cancer: Diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic significance

Towards integrated data model for next-generation bridge maintenance

Pusan National University researchers identify potential new second-line option for advanced biliary tract cancer

[Press-News.org] How some leaves got fat: It's the veins