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Dive into the research topics where Moges Ashagrie Retta is active.

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Featured researches published by Moges Ashagrie Retta.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2016

Three-dimensional microscale modelling of CO2 transport and light propagation in tomato leaves enlightens photosynthesis.

Quang Tri Ho; Herman N.C. Berghuijs; Rodrigo Watté; Pieter Verboven; Els Herremans; Xinyou Yin; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Ben Aernouts; Wouter Saeys; Lukas Helfen; Graham D. Farquhar; P.C. Struik; Bart Nicolai

We present a combined three-dimensional (3-D) model of light propagation, CO2 diffusion and photosynthesis in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) leaves. The model incorporates a geometrical representation of the actual leaf microstructure that we obtained with synchrotron radiation X-ray laminography, and was evaluated using measurements of gas exchange and leaf optical properties. The combination of the 3-D microstructure of leaf tissue and chloroplast movement induced by changes in light intensity affects the simulated CO2 transport within the leaf. The model predicts extensive reassimilation of CO2 produced by respiration and photorespiration. Simulations also suggest that carbonic anhydrase could enhance photosynthesis at low CO2 levels but had little impact on photosynthesis at high CO2 levels. The model confirms that scaling of photosynthetic capacity with absorbed light would improve efficiency of CO2 fixation in the leaf, especially at low light intensity.


Food and Bioprocess Technology | 2014

A multiphase pore scale network model of gas exchange in apple fruit

Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; Solomon Fanta; Metadel Abera; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Els Herremans; Thijs Defraeye; Bart Nicolai

A multiphase pore scale network model was developed to describe mass transfer in apple fruit. The 3D microscale geometry of the tissue was reconstructed from synchrotron radiation tomography images. Individual cells and pores were identified using a watershed segmentation procedure on a Euclidean distance map of the tissue microstructure. Further morphological characteristics of each individual pore, including its volume, connections to the neighbors and the connected area between the pore and its neighbors, were determined. The tissue was represented by a network of nodes (simplified individual pores and cells) that were interconnected by tubes. The transport of the respiratory gases O2 and CO2 between two nodes was modelled using diffusion laws and irreversible thermodynamics, while respiration was taken into account in the individual cellular nodes. A numerical procedure was applied to simulate the gas transport within the discrete network and to compute the local diffusivities of the links in the network. The predicted overall gas diffusivities compared well to experimental data and results computed from a microscale continuum model, thereby validating the pore scale network model. This approach is a computationally attractive alternative to a continuum multiphase approach for modelling gas transport in fruit.


Plant Science | 2015

Modelling the relationship between CO2 assimilation and leaf anatomical properties in tomato leaves

Herman N.C. Berghuijs; Xinyou Yin; Q. Tri Ho; Peter E.L. van der Putten; Pieter Verboven; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Bart Nicolai; P.C. Struik

The CO2 concentration near Rubisco and, therefore, the rate of CO2 assimilation, is influenced by both leaf anatomical factors and biochemical processes. Leaf anatomical structures act as physical barriers for CO2 transport. Biochemical processes add or remove CO2 along its diffusion pathway through mesophyll. We combined a model that quantifies the diffusive resistance for CO2 using anatomical properties, a model that partitions this resistance and an extended version of the Farquhar-von Caemmerer-Berry model. We parametrized the model by gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf anatomical measurements from three tomato cultivars. There was generally a good agreement between the predicted and measured light and CO2 response curves. We did a sensitivity analysis to assess how the rate of CO2 assimilation responds to changes in various leaf anatomical properties. Next, we conducted a similar analysis for assumed diffusive properties and curvature factors. Some variables (diffusion pathway length in stroma, diffusion coefficient of the stroma, curvature factors) substantially affected the predicted CO2 assimilation. We recommend more research on the measurements of these variables and on the development of 2-D and 3-D gas diffusion models, since these do not require the diffusion pathway length in the stroma as predefined parameter.


Plant Science | 2016

Mesophyll conductance and reaction-diffusion models for CO2 transport in C3 leaves; needs, opportunities and challenges

Herman N.C. Berghuijs; Xinyou Yin; Q. Tri Ho; Steven M. Driever; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Bart Nicolai; P.C. Struik

One way to increase potential crop yield could be increasing mesophyll conductance gm. This variable determines the difference between the CO2 partial pressure in the intercellular air spaces (Ci) and that near Rubisco (Cc). Various methods can determine gm from gas exchange measurements, often combined with measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence or carbon isotope discrimination. gm lumps all biochemical and physical factors that cause the difference between Cc and Ci. gm appears to vary with Ci. This variability indicates that gm does not satisfy the physical definition of a conductance according to Ficks first law and is thus an apparent parameter. Uncertainty about the mechanisms that determine gm can be limited to some extent by using analytical models that partition gm into separate conductances. Such models are still only capable of describing the CO2 diffusion pathway to a limited extent, as they make implicit assumptions about the position of mitochondria in the cells, which affect the re-assimilation of (photo)respired CO2. Alternatively, reaction-diffusion models may be used. Rather than quantifying gm, these models explicitly account for factors that affect the efficiency of CO2 transport in the mesophyll. These models provide a better mechanistic description of the CO2 diffusion pathways than mesophyll conductance models. Therefore, we argue that reaction-diffusion models should be used as an alternative to mesophyll conductance models, in case the aim of such a study is to identify traits that can be improved to increase gm.


Plant Science | 2016

A two-dimensional microscale model of gas exchange during photosynthesis in maize (Zea mays L.) leaves

Moges Ashagrie Retta; Quang Tri Ho; Xinyou Yin; Pieter Verboven; Herman N.C. Berghuijs; P.C. Struik; Bart Nicolai

CO2 exchange in leaves of maize (Zea mays L.) was examined using a microscale model of combined gas diffusion and C4 photosynthesis kinetics at the leaf tissue level. Based on a generalized scheme of photosynthesis in NADP-malic enzyme type C4 plants, the model accounted for CO2 diffusion in a leaf tissue, CO2 hydration and assimilation in mesophyll cells, CO2 release from decarboxylation of C4 acids, CO2 fixation in bundle sheath cells and CO2 retro-diffusion from bundle sheath cells. The transport equations were solved over a realistic 2-D geometry of the Kranz anatomy obtained from light microscopy images. The predicted responses of photosynthesis rate to changes in ambient CO2 and irradiance compared well with those obtained from gas exchange measurements. A sensitivity analysis showed that the CO2 permeability of the mesophyll-bundle sheath and airspace-mesophyll interfaces strongly affected the rate of photosynthesis and bundle sheath conductance. Carbonic anhydrase influenced the rate of photosynthesis, especially at low intercellular CO2 levels. In addition, the suberin layer at the exposed surface of the bundle sheath cells was found beneficial in reducing the retro-diffusion. The model may serve as a tool to investigate CO2 diffusion further in relation to the Kranz anatomy in C4 plants.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Localization of (photo)respiration and CO2 re-assimilation in tomato leaves investigated with a reaction-diffusion model

Herman N.C. Berghuijs; Xinyou Yin; Q. Tri Ho; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Pieter Verboven; Bart Nicolai; P.C. Struik

The rate of photosynthesis depends on the CO2 partial pressure near Rubisco, Cc, which is commonly calculated by models using the overall mesophyll resistance. Such models do not explain the difference between the CO2 level in the intercellular air space and Cc mechanistically. This problem can be overcome by reaction-diffusion models for CO2 transport, production and fixation in leaves. However, most reaction-diffusion models are complex and unattractive for procedures that require a large number of runs, like parameter optimisation. This study provides a simpler reaction-diffusion model. It is parameterized by both leaf physiological and leaf anatomical data. The anatomical data consisted of the thickness of the cell wall, cytosol and stroma, and the area ratios of mesophyll exposed to the intercellular air space to leaf surfaces and exposed chloroplast to exposed mesophyll surfaces. The model was used directly to estimate photosynthetic parameters from a subset of the measured light and CO2 response curves; the remaining data were used for validation. The model predicted light and CO2 response curves reasonably well for 15 days old tomato (cv. Admiro) leaves, if (photo)respiratory CO2 release was assumed to take place in the inner cytosol or in the gaps between the chloroplasts. The model was also used to calculate the fraction of CO2 produced by (photo)respiration that is re-assimilated in the stroma, and this fraction ranged from 56 to 76%. In future research, the model should be further validated to better understand how the re-assimilation of (photo)respired CO2 is affected by environmental conditions and physiological parameters.


Plant Science | 2016

Impact of anatomical traits of maize (Zea mays L.) leaf as affected by nitrogen supply and leaf age on bundle sheath conductance

Moges Ashagrie Retta; Xinyou Yin; Petter E.L. van der Putten; Dennis Cantre; Herman N.C. Berghuijs; Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; P.C. Struik; Bart Nicolai

The mechanism of photosynthesis in C4 crops depends on the archetypal Kranz-anatomy. To examine how the leaf anatomy, as altered by nitrogen supply and leaf age, affects the bundle sheath conductance (gbs), maize (Zea mays L.) plants were grown under three contrasting nitrogen levels. Combined gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence measurements were done on fully grown leaves at two leaf ages. The measured data were analysed using a biochemical model of C4 photosynthesis to estimate gbs. The leaf microstructure and ultrastructure were quantified using images obtained from micro-computed tomography and microscopy. There was a strong positive correlation between gbs and leaf nitrogen content (LNC) while old leaves had lower gbs than young leaves. Leaf thickness, bundle sheath cell wall thickness and surface area of bundle sheath cells per unit leaf area (Sb) correlated well with gbs although they were not significantly affected by LNC. As a result, the increase of gbs with LNC was little explained by the alteration of leaf anatomy. In contrast, the combined effect of LNC and leaf age on Sb was responsible for differences in gbs between young leaves and old leaves. Future investigations should consider changes at the level of plasmodesmata and membranes along the CO2 leakage pathway to unravel LNC and age effects further.


V International Symposium on Applications of Modelling as an Innovative Technology in the Horticultural Supply Chain | 2017

Exploring anatomical controls of C 4 leaf photosynthesis using a 3D reaction-diffusion model

Moges Ashagrie Retta; Quang Tri Ho; Xinyou Yin; Pieter Verboven; Herman N.C. Berghuijs; P.C. Struik; Bart Nicolai


proceedings of InsideFood Symposium 2013 | 2013

Application of virtual fruit tissue geometries to postharvest studies

Metadel Abera; Solomon Fanta; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Els Herremans; Thijs Defraeye; Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; Bart Nicolai


Proceedings of the IV International Symposium on Models for Plant Growth, Environmental Control and Farm Management in Protected Cultivation, Nanjijng, China | 2012

A 3-D microscale model for Co2 GasTransport in tomato leaves during photosynthesis

Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; Els Herremans; Moges Ashagrie Retta; Thijs Defraeye; Bart Nicolai; Xinyou Yin; R. K. Thapa; P.C. Struik

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Bart Nicolai

Catholic University of Leuven

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Pieter Verboven

Catholic University of Leuven

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P.C. Struik

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Quang Tri Ho

Université catholique de Louvain

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Herman N.C. Berghuijs

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Xinyou Yin

Jiangxi Agricultural University

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Els Herremans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Thijs Defraeye

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Metadel Abera

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Q. Tri Ho

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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