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Predicting plant growth response under fluctuating temperature by carbon balance modelling

Biology

Predicting plant growth response under fluctuating temperature by carbon balance modelling

C. Seydel, J. Biener, et al.

This groundbreaking research conducted by Charlotte Seydel, Julia Biener, Vladimir Brodsky, Svenja Eberlein, and Thomas Nägele reveals innovative methods using Fourier polynomials to simulate plant metabolism and predict growth responses to fluctuating temperatures. The findings demonstrate how optimizing sucrose and starch biosynthesis can enhance carbon assimilation under heat stress, marking a significant advancement in understanding plant-environment interactions.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Quantification of system dynamics is a central aim of mathematical modelling in biology. Defining experimentally supported functional relationships between molecular entities by mathematical terms enables the application of computational routines to simulate and analyse the underlying molecular system. In many fields of natural sciences and engineering, trigonometric functions are applied to describe oscillatory processes. As biochemical oscillations occur in many aspects of biochemistry and biophysics, Fourier analysis of metabolic functions promises to quantify, describe and analyse metabolism and its reaction towards environmental fluctuations. Here, Fourier polynomials were developed from experimental time-series data and combined with block diagram simulation of plant metabolism to study heat shock response of photosynthetic CO₂ assimilation and carbohydrate metabolism in Arabidopsis thaliana. Simulations predicted a stabilising effect of reduced sucrose biosynthesis capacity and increased capacity of starch biosynthesis on carbon assimilation under transient heat stress. Model predictions were experimentally validated by quantifying plant growth under such stress conditions. In conclusion, this suggests that Fourier polynomials represent a predictive mathematical approach to study dynamic plant-environment interactions.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Feb 24, 2022
Authors
Charlotte Seydel, Julia Biener, Vladimir Brodsky, Svenja Eberlein, Thomas Nägele
Tags
Fourier polynomials
plant growth
heat stress
photosynthesis
Arabidopsis thaliana
carbohydrate metabolism
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