Passive phloem loading and long-distance transport in a synthetic tree-on-a-chip
Jean Comtet, Kaare H. Jensen, Robert Turgeon, Abraham D. Stroock, A., E. Hosoi

TL;DR
This study uses a synthetic microfluidic model to investigate passive phloem loading, demonstrating its sufficiency for long-distance transport in large plants and highlighting its relevance in trees.
Contribution
The paper introduces a microfluidic model to analyze passive phloem loading dynamics, revealing conditions under which passive loading can sustain long-distance transport in plants.
Findings
Passive loading can generate high hydrostatic pressures up to 10 bars.
Convection-limited export dominates in large plants with high transport resistance.
Passive loading is sufficient for long-distance transport in trees.
Abstract
Vascular plants rely on differences of osmotic pressure to export sugars from regions of synthesis (mature leaves) to sugar sinks (roots, fruits). In this process, known as M\"unch pressure flow, the loading of sugars from photosynthetic cells to the export conduit (the phloem) is crucial, as it sets the pressure head necessary to power long-distance transport. Whereas most herbaceous plants use active mechanisms to increase phloem concentration above that of the photosynthetic cells, in most tree species, for which transport distances are largest, loading seems to occur via passive symplastic diffusion from the mesophyll to the phloem. Here, we use a synthetic microfluidic model of a passive loader to explore the nonlinear dynamics that arise during export and determine the ability of passive loading to drive long-distance transport. We first demonstrate that in our device, phloem…
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