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A magnetically enabled simulation of microgravity represses the auxin response during early seed germination on a microfluidic platform

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摘要 For plants on Earth,the phytohormone auxin is essential for gravitropism-regulated seedling establishment and plant growth.However,little is known about auxin responses under microgravity conditions due to the lack of a tool that can provide an alteration of gravity.In this paper,a microfluidic negative magnetophoretic platform is developed to levitate Arabidopsis seeds in an equilibrium plane where the applied magnetic force compensates for gravitational acceleration.With the benefit of the microfluidic platform to simulate a microgravity environment on-chip,it is found that the auxin response is significantly repressed in levitated seeds.Simulated microgravity statistically interrupts auxin responses in embryos,even after chemical-mediated auxin alterations,illustrating that auxin is a critical factor that mediates the plant response to gravity alteration.Furthermore,pretreatment with an auxin transportation inhibitor(N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid)enables a decrease in the auxin response,which is no longer affected by simulated microgravity,demonstrating that polar auxin transportation plays a vital role in gravity-regulated auxin responses.The presented microfluidic platform provides simulated microgravity conditions in an easy-to-implement manner,helping to study and elucidate how plants correspond to diverse gravity conditions;in the future,this may be developed into a versatile tool for biological study on a variety of samples.
出处 《Microsystems & Nanoengineering》 SCIE EI CSCD 2022年第1期97-109,共13页 微系统与纳米工程(英文)
基金 This work was supported by the Key-Area Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province(2019B020226004) the National Natural Science Foundation of China(61805271,62074155) the Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province(2020A1515110142) the Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Commission(JCYJ20170818154035069,KCXFZ202002011008124).
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