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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
Functional Plant Biology

Functional Plant Biology

Volume 48 Number 6 2021


Maintaining the CO2 absorption at light exposure under water restriction is the main challenge of leaf functioning. For this reason, it is important to understand the bottlenecks along the CO2 path from atmosphere to chloroplast. By studying Rodospatha oblongata Poepp., an aroid vine, we were able to correlate the increase in photosynthetic activity with the expansion of intercellular spaces, which can potentially modulate the interaction between mesophyll resistance and stomatal resistance.


Plants can sense and memorise changes in their environment, which allows them to control their life cycle. Plants have sensory, short-term and long-term memory. Possible candidates for memory devices in plants are memristors. Here, we found that electrostimulation of the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula Ellis) by unipolar sinusoidal or triangular periodic electrical trains induces electrical responses in plants with fingerprints of volatile memristors. The discovery of volatile generic memristors in plants opens new directions in the modelling and understanding of electrical phenomena in the plant kingdom.


Plants employ several defence mechanisms to cope with high salt accumulation in soil. The present work demonstrates modulation of aquaporin expression and sodium and potassium ion (Na+ and K+) accumulation by nitric oxide in sunflower seedling roots under salt stress. This work also suggests a correlation between AQP expression and ions (Na+ and K+) homeostasis in response to salt stress and NO.

FP20314Proteomic analysis of young sugarcane plants with contrasting salt tolerance

Denise A. Chiconato, Marília G. de Santana Costa 0000-0002-3199-8315, Tiago S. Balbuena, Rana Munns 0000-0002-7519-2698 and Durvalina M. M. dos Santos
pp. 588-596

Sugarcane is an important crop globally for food and biofuel production, and its yield is being affected by the expansion of saline land. This study compared two cultivars of differing salt tolerance and found that proteins involved in defence, control of reactive oxygen species, and photosynthetic energy production were upregulated in the tolerant variety and downregulated in the sensitive variety.


Costus pictus D. Don is an important medicinal plant with a key bioactive compound known as corosolic acid, which is used in the treatment of diabetes. Tropospheric ozone pollution is very high in Indo-Gangetic Plain of India and its effect on C. pictus is still unexplored. Corosolic acid content was found to be increased at later stages of growth under elevated ozone.

FP21001Is protein carbonylation a biomarker of seed priming and ageing?

Lilya Boucelha, Ouzna Abrous-Belbachir and Réda Djebbar 0000-0003-3166-3299
pp. 611-623

Germination and drought tolerance of plants can be improved by pre-germination treatment (seed priming). However, a negative effect on the longevity of the primed seed is observed and we have shown that proteins oxidation, and particularly carbonylation, is a marker of the primed seed ageing. So better knowledge of seed ageing will allow a longer conservation of primed seeds.

FP20244Changes of lignin biosynthesis in tobacco leaves during maturation

Zhaopeng Song, Daibin Wang, Yabei Gao, Changjun Li, Houlong Jiang, Xiaowei Zhu and Hongying Zhang 0000-0002-4529-5020
pp. 624-633

During maturation, lignin content gradually increased in tobacco leaves, reaching a peak at full maturity, and then gradually decreasing. NtPAL, NtC4H, NtCCoAOMT and NtCOMT may play key roles in the lignin synthesis. Most lignin synthesis-related genes were all expressed in stems, roots, and leaves. NtC3H and NtF5H were specifically expressed in stalks and roots, and not in leaves. Consistently, the NtC3H promoter induced high GUS expression in stems and petioles, marginal in roots, and no GUS activity in leaves.

FP20344A high-throughput method for measuring critical thermal limits of leaves by chlorophyll imaging fluorescence

Pieter A. Arnold 0000-0002-6158-7752, Verónica F. Briceño, Kelli M. Gowland 0000-0001-6066-3103, Alexandra A. Catling 0000-0002-7537-183X, León A. Bravo 0000-0003-4705-4842 and Adrienne B. Nicotra 0000-0001-6578-369X
pp. 634-646

Plants are exposed to severe temperature stress during extreme weather events, which can reduce their ability to photosynthesise and can cause damage to leaf tissue. Measuring these critical limits for leaf photosynthesis requires that we can make efficient and robust measurements, while understanding how experimental conditions can affect results. We demonstrate a method to measure leaves quickly, but also show that the rate of temperature change during measurement affects species differently and needs to be considered carefully.

Committee on Publication Ethics

Call for Papers

We are seeking contributions for the following Special Issues. More

Australian Society of Plant Scientists

Official Journal of the Australian Society of Plant Scientists (asps.org.au).

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Best Paper Award

Phan Thi Thanh Hoai has been awarded the ASPS-FPB Best Paper Award for 2023.

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