Assume we have a compact immersed Lagrangian $L$ in a Kaehler manifold $X$. Recall that a normal vector field $v \in \Gamma(L, N)$ is called Hamiltonian iff $\omega(v, \bullet)$ is an exact 1-form. My question is: what are possible conditions on the geometry of $L$ or $X$ that guarantee that mean curvature flow is a Hamiltonian isotopy (for short time)? I think a necessary condition is that Maslov class is zero. I don't think it's sufficient if $H^1(L, \mathbb{R})\neq 0$.
My specific interest is in Lagrangian tori in $\mathbb{C}P^2$, although any facts in the general direction would be appreciated.
P.S.: this question has been asked on math.stackexchange.com, though I did not have much success with it there.