| Literature DB >> 28856135 |
Tomasz Skrzypczak1, Rafał Krela1, Wojciech Kwiatkowski1, Shraddha Wadurkar1, Aleksandra Smoczyńska2, Przemysław Wojtaszek1.
Abstract
Biohybrid consists of a living organism or cell and at least one engineered component. Designing robot-plant biohybrids is a great challenge: it requires interdisciplinary reconsideration of capabilities intimate specific to the biology of plants. Envisioned advances should improve agricultural/horticultural/social practice and could open new directions in utilization of plants by humans. Proper biohybrid cooperation depends upon effective communication. During evolution, plants developed many ways to communicate with each other, with animals, and with microorganisms. The most notable examples are: the use of phytohormones, rapid long-distance signaling, gravity, and light perception. These processes can now be intentionally re-shaped to establish plant-robot communication. In this article, we focus on plants physiological and molecular processes that could be used in bio-hybrids. We show phototropism and biomechanics as promising ways of effective communication, resulting in an alteration in plant architecture, and discuss the specifics of plants anatomy, physiology and development with regards to the bio-hybrids. Moreover, we discuss ways how robots could influence plants growth and development and present aims, ideas, and realized projects of plant-robot biohybrids.Entities:
Keywords: biological modeling; long distance signaling; plants biohybrids; plants communication; tropisms
Year: 2017 PMID: 28856135 PMCID: PMC5558049 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2017.00046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1The schematic view on biological process that are important for establishing plants–robots communication in biohybrids. Organismal and interorganismal signaling pathways are considered as crucial in biohybrid development, as well as progress in the field of advanced sensors, actuators, and controllers. All these tasks are undertaken in flora robotica project.