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Mesophyll diffusion conductance to CO 2: An unappreciated central player in photosynthesis
Flexas, Jaume; Barbour, Margaret M.; Brendel, Oliver; Cabrera, H.M.; Carriquí, Marc; Díaz-Espejo, Antonio; Douthe, Cyril; Dreyer, Erwin; Ferrio Díaz, Juan Pedro; Galle, Alexander; Galmés, Jeroni; Kodama, Naomi; Medrano, Hipolito; Niinemets, Ülo; Peguero Pina, José Javier; Pou, Alicia; Ribas-Carbó, Miquel; Tomas, Magdalena; Tosens, Tiina; Warren, Charles R.
Mesophyll diffusion conductance to CO 2 is a key photosynthetic trait that has been studied intensively in the past years. The intention of the present review is to update knowledge of g m, and highlight the important unknown and controversial aspects that require future work. The photosynthetic limitation imposed by mesophyll conductance is large, and under certain conditions can be the most significant photosynthetic limitation. New evidence shows that anatomical traits, such as cell wall thickness and chloroplast distribution are amongst the stronger determinants of mesophyll conductance, although rapid variations in response to environmental changes might be regulated by other factors such as aquaporin conductance.Gaps in knowledge that should be research priorities for the near future include: how different is mesophyll conductance among phylogenetically distant groups and how has it evolved? Can mesophyll conductance be uncoupled from regulation of the water path? What are the main drivers of mesophyll conductance? The need for mechanistic and phenomenological models of mesophyll conductance and its incorporation in process-based photosynthesis models is also highlighted. The study was financially supported by the Estonian Ministry of Science and Education (grant SF1090065s07), the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through projects BFU2008-01072 (MEFORE), AGL2009-11310/AGR, BFU2011-23294 (MECOME) and CGL2009-13079-C02-01 (PALEOISOTREE), and the European Commission through European Regional Fund (the Estonian Center of Excellence in Environmental Adaptation), and the Marie Curie project MC-ERG-246725 (FP7). J.P.F. is supported by the Ramón y Cajal program (RYC-2008-02050). A.G. had a Swiss National Science Fellowship (PA00P3_126259). M.M.B. and C.R.W are supported by Future Fellowships from the Australian Research Council (FT0992063 and FT100100024). C.D. was supported by a grant from the French government and by the cooperation project Tranzfor (Transferring Research between EU and Australia–New Zealand on Forestry and Climate Change, PIRSES-GA-2008-230793) funded by the European Union.
-Aquaporins
-Climate change
-Conductance
-Plant hydraulics
-Photosynthesi
-Canvi climàtic
(c) Elsevier, 2012
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