个人简介
2000-present: Senior Lecturer in Plant Biochemistry, University of Westminster
1992-2000: Research Associate in the Division of Biological Sciences at Lancaster University investigating the relationship between growth, turgor pressure and cell wall rheology in maize leaves and tomato fruit, including use of a single cell pressure probe.
1987-1991: Doctoral research into cell wall biochemistry and regulation of abscission into cell wall biochemistry and regulation of abscission at the School of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford (Linacre College).
Expertise: Plant cell wall biochemistry and biophysics, polymer rheology, plant water relations.
研究领域
查看导师新发文章
(温馨提示:请注意重名现象,建议点开原文通过作者单位确认)
Stuart's main interest is in the relationships between plant cell wall biochemistry, plant cell wall mechanical behaviour and plant physiology. The internal turgor pressures in plant cells are generally very high (typically >0.5 MPa in well watered plants). The cell walls must contain these pressures but the interaction between pressure and tension in the wall is also critical in producing light flexible structures, such as leaves. This situation also presents plants with a problem, as for plant cells to grow the cell wall must become sufficiently plastic for cells to become larger without losing its structural integrity. His main research interest is how plants manipulate the chemical components of their cell walls in order to control their structural properties allowing cell expansion to occur in a controlled and regulated fashion.
Stuart's work is primarily based upon measurement of the biomechanical behaviour of growing plant tissues by creep extensiometry and examining the effect of different chemical, physical and enzymic treatments on the rate of extension. They are also using the Acetobacter xylinum to produce "artificial plant cell walls" as this bacterium produces cellulose microfibrils that resemble those found in plant cell walls.
These mechanical measurements have been interpreted using models from synthetic polymer rheology and this approach has generated a number of useful and novel insights into the behaviour of plant cell walls, including discovery of a completely new mechanism of growth inhibition under drought conditions.