Abstract
The link between genetic regulation and the definition of form and size during morphogenesis remains largely an open question in both plant and animal biology. This is partially due to the complexity of the process, involving extensive molecular networks, multiple feedbacks between different scales of organization and physical forces operating at multiple levels. Here we present a conceptual and modeling framework aimed at generating an integrated understanding of morphogenesis in plants. This framework is based on the biophysical properties of plant cells, which are under high internal turgor pressure, and are prevented from bursting because of the presence of a rigid cell wall. To control cell growth, the underlying molecular networks must interfere locally with the elastic and/or plastic extensibility of this cell wall. We present a model in the form of a three dimensional (3D) virtual tissue, where growth depends on the local modulation of wall mechanical properties and turgor pressure. The model shows how forces generated by turgor-pressure can act both cell autonomously and non-cell autonomously to drive growth in different directions. We use simulations to explore lateral organ formation at the shoot apical meristem. Although different scenarios lead to similar shape changes, they are not equivalent and lead to different, testable predictions regarding the mechanical and geometrical properties of the growing lateral organs. Using flower development as an example, we further show how a limited number of gene activities can explain the complex shape changes that accompany organ outgrowth.
Highlights
The control of form and size is a central issue in developmental biology
Much research in molecular and developmental biology has been devoted to unravelling the mechanisms that govern the development of living systems
We developed a computational framework to model the mechanics of 3D tissues during growth at cellular resolution
Summary
The control of form and size is a central issue in developmental biology. It is commonly accepted that genetic regulation is at the basis of morphogenesis. While molecular genetics has provided an important number of actors required for morphogenetic events, the link between these regulators and global shape control remains largely an open question in both plant and animal biology. Certain species exhibit complex shapes while being composed of only one giant and multinucleated cell (see S1 Fig.). This raises the question of the exact contribution of the presence of neighboring cells in the growth of a given cell, within a tissue. This issue has mainly been addressed from a signaling point of view (e.g. diffusion of morphogens [1], mechanical feedbacks [2,3]), but the role of multicellularity in the biophysics of growth remains to be formalized
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