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One crucial problem that plants faced during their evolution, particularly during the transition to growth on land, was how to transport water, nutrients, metabolites, and small signaling molecules within a large, multicellular body. As a solution to this problem, land plants developed specific tissues for conducting molecules, called water-conducting cells (WCCs) and food-conducting cells (FCCs). The well-developed WCCs and FCCs in extant plants are the tracheary elements and sieve elements, respectively, which are found in vascular plants. Recent molecular genetic studies revealed that transcriptional networks regulate the differentiation of tracheary and sieve elements, and that the networks governing WCC differentiation are largely conserved among land plant species. In this review, we discuss the molecular evolution of plant conducting cells. By focusing on the evolution of the key transcription factors that regulate vascular cell differentiation, the NAC transcription factor VASCULAR-RELATED NAC-DOMAIN for WCCs and the MYB-coiled-coil (CC)-type transcription factor ALTERED PHLOEM DEVELOPMENT for sieve elements, we describe how land plants evolved molecular systems to produce the specialized cells that function as WCCs and FCCs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erw473 | DOI Listing |
RSC Adv
August 2025
Institute of Rare and Scattered Elements, College of Chemistry, Liaoning University Shenyang Liaoning 110036 China
In the context of the global energy transition, the efficient extraction of lithium resources has become a critical link in the new energy industry chain. Addressing challenges such as poor selectivity, low adsorption capacity, and environmental concerns in extracting lithium from salt lake brines, this study developed a novel aluminum-based adsorbent/zeolite molecular sieve composite adsorbent (LiAl-LDHs/ZSM-5). The material was constructed with a hierarchical porous structure through seed-assisted synthesis of the ZSM-5 molecular sieve carrier, followed by hydrothermal growth of lithium-aluminum layered double hydroxide (LiAl-LDHs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Sens
August 2025
Paderborn University, Faculty of Science, Department of Chemistry, Warburger Str. 100, Paderborn 33098, Germany.
A universal method for creating selective hydrogen (H) gas sensors through the integration of microporous zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) filter layers on metal oxide sensing layers is presented. The sensor design consists of an indium-modified tin oxide (In-SnO) layer as the gas-sensitive component, topped by a size-selective ZIF filter layer. The ZIF layer is generated by first depositing zinc oxide (ZnO) of variable thickness (20-48 nm) onto the In-SnO layer, followed by in situ conversion to either ZIF-8 or ZIF-71 through solvothermal methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis
April 2025
The generation of vortex arrays holds significant potential for applications in multi-channel fiber optics communication and optical micromanipulation due to their unique properties. These applications necessitate vortex array generation devices that are structurally simple and cost-effective. In this study, a composite spiral photon sieve (CSPS) is proposed, leveraging the traditional spiral photon sieve as the foundational structure and integrating the hill-climbing algorithm (HCA) for design optimization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiol Plant
August 2025
Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
The mesophyll of succulent leaves of Aizoaceae plants may have specialized water-storing tissue in perennial species (storage succulents), but not in annual species (all-cell succulents). Storage succulents have peripheral minor veins with either outward-facing xylem (exoscopic), restricted to the basal subfamily Sesuvioideae, or inward-facing xylem (endoscopic) with the phloem adjacent to the chlorenchyma ring, as seen in derived subfamilies such as the hyperdiverse Ruschioideae. Here, we investigate the implications of phloem positioning relative to photosynthesizing cells by comparative transmission electron microscopy, aided by immunolocalization of sucrose transporters (SUT1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chem
August 2025
Key Laboratory of Chemistry and Engineering of Forest Products, State Ethnic Affairs Commission; Guangxi Key Laboratory of Chemistry and Engineering of Forest Products; Engineering Research Center of Low-carbon and High-quality Utilization of Forest Biomass, University of Guangxi; Laboratory of Opti
A β-lactoglobulin amyloid fibrils-poly(vinyl alcohol)-Ag nanoparticles (β-LAFs-PVA-AgNPs) hydrogel was prepared as a surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) substrate based on poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) with adsorbent β-lactoglobulin amyloid fibrils (β-LAFs) structured into the network structure of the hydrogel using the immersion reduction method. Due to the high swelling and contraction properties of the hydrogel in different states and the "sieving" nature of its network cavities, small molecular target analytes can more easily enter the space-confined hydrogel and rapidly bind with the amide bonds of the protein structure. During the contraction process of the hydrogel, the target analytes are enriched, and the Ag nanoparticles (AgNPs) come closer together to form Raman "hot spots", generating stronger SERS signals.
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