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Featured researches published by Quang Tri Ho.


Plant Physiology | 2008

Three-Dimensional Gas Exchange Pathways in Pome Fruit Characterized by Synchrotron X-Ray Computed Tomography

Pieter Verboven; Greet Kerckhofs; Hibru Kelemu Mebatsion; Quang Tri Ho; Kristiaan Temst; Martine Wevers; Peter Cloetens; Bart Nicolai

Our understanding of the gas exchange mechanisms in plant organs critically depends on insights in the three-dimensional (3-D) structural arrangement of cells and voids. Using synchrotron radiation x-ray tomography, we obtained for the first time high-contrast 3-D absorption images of in vivo fruit tissues of high moisture content at 1.4-μm resolution and 3-D phase contrast images of cell assemblies at a resolution as low as 0.7 μm, enabling visualization of individual cell morphology, cell walls, and entire void networks that were previously unknown. Intercellular spaces were always clear of water. The apple (Malus domestica) cortex contains considerably larger parenchyma cells and voids than pear (Pyrus communis) parenchyma. Voids in apple often are larger than the surrounding cells and some cells are not connected to void spaces. The main voids in apple stretch hundreds of micrometers but are disconnected. Voids in pear cortex tissue are always smaller than parenchyma cells, but each cell is surrounded by a tight and continuous network of voids, except near brachyssclereid groups. Vascular and dermal tissues were also measured. The visualized network architecture was consistent over different picking dates and shelf life. The differences in void fraction (5.1% for pear cortex and 23.0% for apple cortex) and in gas network architecture helps explain the ability of tissues to facilitate or impede gas exchange. Structural changes and anisotropy of tissues may eventually lead to physiological disorders. A combined tomography and internal gas analysis during growth are needed to make progress on the understanding of void formation in fruit.


Plant Physiology | 2011

A Three-Dimensional Multiscale Model for Gas Exchange in Fruit

Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; Bert Verlinden; Els Herremans; Martine Wevers; Jan Carmeliet; Bart Nicolai

Respiration of bulky plant organs such as roots, tubers, stems, seeds, and fruit depends very much on oxygen (O2) availability and often follows a Michaelis-Menten-like response. A multiscale model is presented to calculate gas exchange in plants using the microscale geometry of the tissue, or vice versa, local concentrations in the cells from macroscopic gas concentration profiles. This approach provides a computationally feasible and accurate analysis of cell metabolism in any plant organ during hypoxia and anoxia. The predicted O2 and carbon dioxide (CO2) partial pressure profiles compared very well with experimental data, thereby validating the multiscale model. The important microscale geometrical features are the shape, size, and three-dimensional connectivity of cells and air spaces. It was demonstrated that the gas-exchange properties of the cell wall and cell membrane have little effect on the cellular gas exchange of apple (Malus × domestica) parenchyma tissue. The analysis clearly confirmed that cells are an additional route for CO2 transport, while for O2 the intercellular spaces are the main diffusion route. The simulation results also showed that the local gas concentration gradients were steeper in the cells than in the surrounding air spaces. Therefore, to analyze the cellular metabolism under hypoxic and anoxic conditions, the microscale model is required to calculate the correct intracellular concentrations. Understanding the O2 response of plants and plant organs thus not only requires knowledge of external conditions, dimensions, gas-exchange properties of the tissues, and cellular respiration kinetics but also of microstructure.


New Phytologist | 2009

Microscale mechanisms of gas exchange in fruit tissue

Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; Hibru Kelemu Mebatsion; Bert Verlinden; Stefan Vandewalle; Bart Nicolai

* Gas-filled intercellular spaces are considered the predominant pathways for gas transport through bulky plant organs such as fruit. Here, we introduce a methodology that combines a geometrical model of the tissue microstructure with mathematical equations to describe gas exchange mechanisms involved in fruit respiration. * Pear (Pyrus communis) was chosen as a model system. The two-dimensional microstructure of cortex tissue was modelled based on light microscopy images. The transport of O(2) and CO(2) in the intercellular space, cell wall network and cytoplasm was modelled using diffusion laws, irreversible thermodynamics and enzyme kinetics. * In silico analysis showed that O(2) transport mainly occurred through intercellular spaces and less through the intracellular liquid, while CO(2) was transported at equal rates in both phases. Simulations indicated that biological variation of the apparent diffusivity appears to be caused by the random distribution of cells and intercellular spaces in tissue. Temperature does not affect modelled gas exchange properties; it rather acts on the respiration metabolism. * This modelling approach provides, for the first time, detailed information about gas exchange mechanisms at the microscopic scale in bulky plant organs, such as fruit, and can be used to study conditions of anoxia.


New Phytologist | 2012

Root aeration via aerenchymatous phellem: three-dimensional micro-imaging and radial O2 profiles in Melilotus siculus.

Pieter Verboven; Ole Pedersen; Els Herremans; Quang Tri Ho; Bart Nicolai; Timothy D. Colmer; Natasha L. Teakle

• Internal root aeration enables waterlogging-tolerant species to grow in anoxic soil. Secondary aerenchyma, in the form of aerenchymatous phellem, is of importance to root aeration in some dicotyledonous species. Little is known about this type of aerenchyma in comparison with primary aerenchyma. • Micro-computed tomography was employed to visualize, in three dimensions, the microstructure of the aerenchymatous phellem in roots of Melilotus siculus. Tissue porosity and respiration were also measured for phellem and stelar tissues. A multiscale, three-dimensional, diffusion-respiration model compared the predicted O(2) profiles in roots with those measured using O(2) microelectrodes. • Micro-computed tomography confirmed the measured high porosity of aerenchymatous phellem (44-54%) and the low porosity of stele (2-5%) A network of connected gas spaces existed in the phellem, but not within the stele. O(2) partial pressures were high in the phellem, but fell below the detection limit in the thicker upper part of the stele, consistent with the poorly connected low porosity and high respiratory demand. • The presented model integrates and validates micro-computed tomography with measured radial O(2) profiles for roots with aerenchymatous phellem, confirming the existence of near-anoxic conditions at the centre of the stele in the basal parts of the root, coupled with only hypoxic conditions towards the apex.


New Phytologist | 2013

Void space inside the developing seed of Brassica napus and the modelling of its function

Pieter Verboven; Els Herremans; Ljudmilla Borisjuk; Lukas Helfen; Quang Tri Ho; Henning Tschiersch; Johannes Fuchs; Bart Nicolai; Hardy Rolletschek

The developing seed essentially relies on external oxygen to fuel aerobic respiration, but it is currently unknown how oxygen diffuses into and within the seed, which structural pathways are used and what finally limits gas exchange. By applying synchrotron X-ray computed tomography to developing oilseed rape seeds we uncovered void spaces, and analysed their three-dimensional assembly. Both the testa and the hypocotyl are well endowed with void space, but in the cotyledons, spaces were small and poorly inter-connected. In silico modelling revealed a three orders of magnitude range in oxygen diffusivity from tissue to tissue, and identified major barriers to gas exchange. The oxygen pool stored in the voids is consumed about once per minute. The function of the void space was related to the tissue-specific distribution of storage oils, storage protein and starch, as well as oxygen, water, sugars, amino acids and the level of respiratory activity, analysed using a combination of magnetic resonance imaging, specific oxygen sensors, laser micro-dissection, biochemical and histological methods. We conclude that the size and inter-connectivity of void spaces are major determinants of gas exchange potential, and locally affect the respiratory activity of a developing seed.


Food and Bioprocess Technology | 2013

Virtual Fruit Tissue Generation Based on Cell Growth Modelling

Metadel Abera; Solomon Fanta; Pieter Verboven; Quang Tri Ho; Jan Carmeliet; Bart Nicolai

A cell-growth-based algorithm is presented based on the biomechanics of plant cells in tissues to help explain the typical differences in cellular architecture found between different pome fruit species, cultivars and tissues. The cell was considered as a closed thin-walled structure, maintained in tension by turgor pressure. The cell walls of adjacent cells were modelled as parallel and linearly elastic elements, which obeyed Hooke’s law. A Voronoi tessellation was used to generate the initial topology of the cells. Cell expansion then resulted from turgor pressure acting on the yielding cell wall material. To find the sequence positions of each vertex of the cell walls, and thus, the shape of the cells with time, a system of differential equations for the positions and velocities of each vertex were established and solved using a Runge–Kutta fourth and fifth order (ODE45) method. The model was used to generate realistic 2D fruit tissue structures composed of cells of random shapes and sizes, cell walls and intercellular spaces. Comparison was made with fruit tissue micrographs. The virtual tissues can be used for numerical simulation of heat and mass transfer phenomena or mechanical deformation during controlled atmosphere storage of fresh pome fruit.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2014

The mechanism of improved aeration due to gas films on leaves of submerged rice

Pieter Verboven; Ole Pedersen; Quang Tri Ho; Bart Nicolai; Timothy D. Colmer

Some terrestrial wetland plants, such as rice, have super-hydrophobic leaf surfaces which retain a gas film when submerged. O2 movement through the diffusive boundary layer (DBL) of floodwater, gas film and stomata into leaf mesophyll was explored by means of a reaction-diffusion model that was solved in a three-dimensional leaf anatomy model. The anatomy and dark respiration of leaves of rice (Oryza sativa L.) were measured and used to compute O2 fluxes and partial pressure of O2 (pO2 ) in the DBL, gas film and leaf when submerged. The effects of floodwater pO2 , DBL thickness, cuticle permeability, presence of gas film and stomatal opening were explored. Under O2 -limiting conditions of the bulk water (pO2  < 10 kPa), the gas film significantly increases the O2 flux into submerged leaves regardless of whether stomata are fully or partly open. With a gas film, tissue pO2 substantially increases, even for the slightest stomatal opening, but not when stomata are completely closed. The effect of gas films increases with decreasing cuticle permeability. O2 flux and tissue pO2 decrease with increasing DBL thickness. The present modelling analysis provides a mechanistic understanding of how leaf gas films facilitate O2 entry into submerged plants.


BMC Plant Biology | 2014

Transcriptomic events associated with internal browning of apple during postharvest storage

Ifigeneia Mellidou; Kim Buts; Darwish Hatoum; Quang Tri Ho; Jason W. Johnston; Christopher B. Watkins; Robert J. Schaffer; Nigel E. Gapper; James J. Giovannoni; David R. Rudell; Maarten Hertog; Bart Nicolai

BackgroundPostharvest ripening of apple (Malus x domestica) can be slowed down by low temperatures, and a combination of low O2 and high CO2 levels. While this maintains the quality of most fruit, occasionally storage disorders such as flesh browning can occur. This study aimed to explore changes in the apple transcriptome associated with a flesh browning disorder related to controlled atmosphere storage using RNA-sequencing techniques. Samples from a browning-susceptible cultivar (‘Braeburn’) were stored for four months under controlled atmosphere. Based on a visual browning index, the inner and outer cortex of the stored apples was classified as healthy or affected tissue.ResultsOver 600 million short single-end reads were mapped onto the Malus consensus coding sequence set, and differences in the expression profiles between healthy and affected tissues were assessed to identify candidate genes associated with internal browning in a tissue-specific manner. Genes involved in lipid metabolism, secondary metabolism, and cell wall modifications were highly modified in the affected inner cortex, while energy-related and stress-related genes were mostly altered in the outer cortex. The expression levels of several of them were confirmed using qRT-PCR. Additionally, a set of novel browning-specific differentially expressed genes, including pyruvate dehydrogenase and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate oxidase, was validated in apples stored for various periods at different controlled atmosphere conditions, giving rise to potential biomarkers associated with high risk of browning development.ConclusionsThe gene expression data presented in this study will help elucidate the molecular mechanism of browning development in apples at controlled atmosphere storage. A conceptual model, including energy-related (linked to the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the electron transport chain) and lipid-related genes (related to membrane alterations, and fatty acid oxidation), for browning development in apple is proposed, which may be relevant for future studies towards improving the postharvest life of apple.


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.


Optics Express | 2015

Modeling the propagation of light in realistic tissue structures with MMC-fpf: a meshed Monte Carlo method with free phase function.

Rodrigo Watté; Ben Aernouts; Robbe Van Beers; Els Herremans; Quang Tri Ho; Pieter Verboven; Bart Nicolai; Wouter Saeys

Monte Carlo methods commonly used in tissue optics are limited to a layered tissue geometry and thus provide only a very rough approximation for many complex media such as biological structures. To overcome these limitations, a Meshed Monte Carlo method with flexible phase function choice (fpf-MC) has been developed to function in a mesh. This algorithm can model the light propagation in any complexly shaped structure, by attributing optical properties to the different mesh elements. Furthermore, this code allows the use of different discretized phase functions for each tissue type, which can be simulated from the microstructural properties of the tissue, in combination with a tool for simulating the bulk optical properties of polydisperse suspensions. As a result, the scattering properties of tissues can be estimated from information on the microstructural properties of the tissue. This is important for the estimation of the bulk optical properties that can be used for the light propagation model, since many types of tissue have never been characterized in literature. The combination of these contributions, made it possible to use the MMC-fpf for modeling the light porapagation in plant tissue. The developed Meshed Monte Carlo code with flexible phase function choice (MMC-fpf) was successfully validated in simulation through comparison with the Monte Carlo code in Multi-Layered tissues (R2 > 0.9999) and experimentally by comparing the measured and simulated reflectance (RMSE = 0.015%) and transmittance (RMSE = 0.0815%) values for tomato leaves.

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Bart Nicolai

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Pieter Verboven

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Bert Verlinden

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Els Herremans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Hibru Kelemu Mebatsion

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Metadel Abera

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Martine Wevers

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Solomon Fanta

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Thijs Defraeye

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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