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Journal ArticleDOI

Cellulose fibrils direct plant organ movements

Peter Fratzl, +2 more
- 18 Aug 2008 - 
- Vol. 139, pp 275-282
TLDR
A simple mechanical model for the cell wall is studied which considers extensible cellulose fibrils in an isotropically swelling matrix and predicts that swelling may lead either to significant compressive or tensile stresses or to large movements at low stresses.
Abstract
The secondary plant cell wall is a composite of cellulose and a water-swelling matrix containing hemicelluloses and lignin. Recent experiments showed that this swelling capacity helps generating growth stresses, e.g., in conifer branches or in the stem when subjected to side loads. A similar mechanism also provides motility to wheat seeds. Here we study a simple mechanical model for the cell wall which—in contrast to earlier models—considers extensible cellulose fibrils in an isotropically swelling matrix. Depending on the detailed architecture of the cellulose fibrils, the model predicts that swelling may lead either to significant compressive or tensile stresses or to large movements at low stresses. The model reproduces most of the experimental observations in the wood cells and in the awns of wheat dispersal units. It is also simple enough to provide general guidelines for designing the architecture of fibres in an isotropic swelling medium to generate movements and forces of various kinds and directions.

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Citations
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TL;DR: A robust and universal method to replicate this unusual shape-changing mechanism of natural systems in artificial bioinspired composites, based upon the remote control of the orientation of reinforcing inorganic particles within the composite using a weak external magnetic field is proposed.
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Towards High-Performance Bioinspired Composites

TL;DR: The importance of replicating the design principles of biological materials rather than their structure per se is highlighted, and possible directions for further progress in this fascinating, interdisciplinary field are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

How the Venus flytrap snaps

TL;DR: This study identifies an ingenious solution to scaling up movements in non-muscular engines and provides a general framework for understanding nastic motion in plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

In touch: plant responses to mechanical stimuli

TL;DR: Molecular genetic methods may enable elucidation of mechanisms of touch perception, signal transduction and response regulation, and identify genes that encode calcium-binding, cell wall modifying, defense, transcription factor and kinase proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reversible Switching of Hydrogel-Actuated Nanostructures into Complex Micropatterns

TL;DR: This work designed dynamic actuation systems by integrating high–aspect-ratio silicon nanocolumns, either free-standing or substrate-attached, with a hydrogel layer and demonstrated the formation of a variety of elaborate reversibly actuated micropatterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of wheat awns in the seed dispersal unit.

TL;DR: It is discovered that the awns of the dispersal unit of wild wheat are also able to propel the seeds on and into the ground, suggesting that the dead tissue is analogous to a motor.
Journal ArticleDOI

How pine cones open

TL;DR: In this article, the scales of seed-bearing pine cones move in response to changes in relative humidity, releasing the cone's seeds when it is dry, and close up if it is damp.
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