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The efficiency in harvesting light energy is essential for both crop and feedstock productivity. Key targets for optimization of energy efficiency include energy capture, conversion, translocation and storage. Surprisingly little is known about the mechanisms of carbon allocation and the communication between source and sink. We surmise that regulatory networks that coordinate carbon partitioning and allocation might be control points and thus suitable for optimization by engineering. At a first step towards identifying such regulatory networks, our lab identified key players in missing steps of allocation, specifically cellular sugar uptake (SUT family, founding members identified by my team) and cellular efflux carriers (SWEET superfamily, founding members identified by my team). In plants, both classes of transporters are encoded by multigene families. We show that specific subsets of SWEETs serve critical roles in cellular sucrose efflux in the leaf for phloem loading, in seeds for seed filling, as well as in nectar section and vacuolar storage
similarly SUTs play critical roles in cellular uptake during phloem loading and seed filling. Access to the plant SWEETs provided the clues needed for identifying novel bacterial and human sugar transporters. Moreover, we found that pathogens hijack SWEETs to access the plants energy resources. In contrast to SUTs, which are predominantly proton symporters, SWEETs appear to function as facilitators, and thus must be tightly regulated to prevent spillover of carbon into cell walls. One of the key goals of this project was to identify such carriers, characterize the role of key members in carbon allocation.<
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To decrypt the biological circuits we need novel diagnostic tools that, analogous to oscilloscopes in electrical engineering of circuit boards, allow us to quantify fluxes
here by monitoring sugars. Such probes can provide crucial information on systems properties such as metabolic impedance. To measure steady state metabolite levels with minimal invasive methods, and to develop impedance measurements in vivo, we constructed and optimized a set of probes, namely F�rster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) nanosensors for glucose and sucrose. The probes monitor the concentration of a specific metabolite with high temporal resolution, and, since encoded genetically, can be targeted to specific cells or even specific cellular compartments and thus obtain measurements with cellular and subcellular resolution. We also developed a new platform for monitoring such sensors in vivo, the RootChip.<
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