Undirected Sucrose Efflux Mitigation by the FT-Like SP6A Preferentially Enhances Tuber Resource Partitioning

Bas van den Herik, Kirsten ten Tusscher*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The yield of harvestable plant organs depends on overall photosynthetic output and the subsequent distribution of the produced assimilates from source leaves across different sink organs. In this study, we aimed to obtain, using a two-sink transport model, mechanistic understanding of how the interplay between sink and pathway properties together determines sink resource partitioning. As a working example, we analyzed the partitioning of resources within potato plants, investigating the determinants of tuber sink yield. Our results indicated that, contrary to earlier studies, with a spatially explicit biophysically detailed model, transport pathway properties significantly affect sink resource partitioning within the physiologically relevant domain. Additionally, we uncovered that xylem flow, through its hydraulic coupling to the phloem, and sucrose efflux along the phloem, also significantly affected resource partitioning. For tubers, it is the cumulative disadvantage compared to sink leaves (distance, xylem flow, and sucrose efflux) that enable an undirected SP6A-mediated reduction of sucrose efflux to preferentially benefit tuber resource partitioning. Combined with the SP6A-mediated sink strength increase, undirected SP6A introduction significantly enhances tuber resource partitioning.

Original languageEnglish
Article number817909
Pages (from-to)1-14
Number of pages14
JournalFrontiers in Plant Science
Volume13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 May 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This study was done in the framework of the MAMY project, with BH funded by the TTW (Grant No. 16889.2019C00026), jointly funded by the MinLNV and the HIP consortium of companies.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 van den Herik and ten Tusscher.

Funding

This study was done in the framework of the MAMY project, with BH funded by the TTW (Grant No. 16889.2019C00026), jointly funded by the MinLNV and the HIP consortium of companies.

Keywords

  • biophysical model
  • phloem
  • potato
  • resource partitioning
  • SP6A
  • sucrose
  • SWEET
  • xylem

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