Publications by authors named "Richard Harwood"

Unravelling the complexities of transpiration can be assisted by understanding the oxygen isotope composition of transpired water vapour (δE). It is often assumed that δE is at steady state, thereby mirroring the oxygen isotope composition of source water (δsource), but this assumption has never been tested at the whole-tree scale. This study utilized the unique infrastructure of 12 whole-tree chambers enclosing Eucalyptus parramattensis E.

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Aims/hypothesis: Almost all beta cells contact one capillary and insulin granule fusion is targeted to this region. However, there are reports of beta cells contacting more than one capillary. We therefore set out to determine the proportion of beta cells with multiple contacts and the impact of this on cell structure and function.

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When microscopy meets modelling the exciting concept of a 'virtual leaf' is born. The goal of a 'virtual leaf' is to capture complex physiology in a virtual environment, resulting in the capacity to run experiments computationally. One example of a 'virtual leaf' application is capturing 3D anatomy from volume microscopy data and estimating where water evaporates in the leaf and the proportions of apoplastic, symplastic and gas phase water transport.

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Despite a growing catalog of secreted factors critical for lymphatic network assembly, little is known about the mechanisms that modulate the expression level of these molecular cues in blood vascular endothelial cells (BECs). Here, we show that a BEC-specific transcription factor, SOX7, plays a crucial role in a non-cell-autonomous manner by modulating the transcription of angiocrine signals to pattern lymphatic vessels. While SOX7 is not expressed in lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs), the conditional loss of SOX7 function in mouse embryos causes a dysmorphic dermal lymphatic phenotype.

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The leaf intercellular airspace is a tortuous environment consisting of cells of different shapes, packing densities, and orientation, all of which have an effect on the travelling distance of molecules from the stomata to the mesophyll cell surfaces. Tortuosity, the increase in displacement over the actual distance between two points, is typically defined as encompassing the whole leaf airspace, but heterogeneity in pore dimensions and orientation between the spongy and palisade mesophyll likely result in heterogeneity in tortuosity along different axes and would predict longer traveling distance along the path of least tortuosity, such as vertically within the columnar cell matrix of the palisade layer. Here, we compare a previously established geometric method to a random walk approach, novel for this analysis in plant leaves, in four different Eucalyptus species.

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Thermoregulation of leaf temperature (T ) may foster metabolic homeostasis in plants, but the degree to which T is moderated, and under what environmental contexts, is a topic of debate. Isotopic studies inferred the temperature of photosynthetic carbon assimilation to be a constant value of c. 20°C; by contrast, leaf biophysical theory suggests a strong dependence of T on environmental drivers.

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Leaf function is intimately related to the size, shape, abundance and position of cells and chloroplasts. Anatomy has long been assessed and quantified in two dimensions with 3D structure inferred from 2D micrographs. Serial block face scanning electron microscopy (SBF-SEM) was used to reconstruct 95 cells and 1173 chloroplasts from three wheat and nine chickpea leaves (three samples each from three chickpea genotypes).

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Leaves are a nexus for the exchange of water, carbon, and energy between terrestrial plants and the atmosphere. Research in recent decades has highlighted the critical importance of the underlying biophysical and anatomical determinants of CO and HO transport, but a quantitative understanding of how detailed 3D leaf anatomy mediates within-leaf transport has been hindered by the lack of a consensus framework for analyzing or simulating transport and its spatial and temporal dynamics realistically, and by the difficulty of measuring within-leaf transport at the appropriate scales. We discuss how recent technological advancements now make a spatially explicit 3D leaf analysis possible, through new imaging and modeling tools that will allow us to address long-standing questions related to plant carbon-water exchange.

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