Mechanical shielding of rapidly growing cells buffers growth heterogeneity and contributes to organ shape reproducibility - INRAE - Institut national de recherche pour l’agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement
Article Dans Une Revue Current Biology - CB Année : 2017

Mechanical shielding of rapidly growing cells buffers growth heterogeneity and contributes to organ shape reproducibility

Résumé

A landmark of developmental biology is the production of reproducible shapes, through stereotyped morphogenetic events. At the cell level, growth is often highly heterogeneous, allowing shape diversity to arise. Yet, how can reproducible shapes emerge from such growth heterogeneity? Is growth heterogeneity filtered out? Here, we focus on rapidly growing trichome cells in the Arabidopsis sepal, a reproducible floral organ. We show via computational modeling that rapidly growing cells may distort organ shape. However, the cortical microtubule alignment along growthderived maximal tensile stress in adjacent cells would mechanically isolate rapidly growing cells and limit their impact on organ shape. In vivo, we observed such microtubule response to stress and consistently found no significant effect of trichome number on sepal shape in wild-type and lines with trichome number defects. Conversely, modulating the microtubule response to stress in katanin and spiral2 mutant made sepal shape dependent on trichome number, suggesting that, while mechanical signals are propagated around rapidly growing cells, the resistance to stress in adjacent cells mechanically isolates rapidly growing cells, thus contributing to organ shape reproducibility.

Dates et versions

hal-02624329 , version 1 (26-05-2020)

Identifiants

Citer

Nathan Hervieux, Satoru Tsugawa, Antoine Fruleux, Mathilde Dumond, Anne-Lise Routier-Kierzkowska, et al.. Mechanical shielding of rapidly growing cells buffers growth heterogeneity and contributes to organ shape reproducibility. Current Biology - CB, 2017, 27 (22), pp.3468-3479. ⟨10.1016/j.cub.2017.10.033⟩. ⟨hal-02624329⟩
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