Abstract

Plant cells have two main modes of growth generating anisotropic structures. Diffuse growth where whole cell walls extend in specific directions, guided by anisotropically positioned cellulose fibers, and tip growth, with inhomogeneous addition of new cell wall material at the tip of the structure. Cells are known to regulate these processes via molecular signals and the cytoskeleton. Mechanical stress has been proposed to provide an input to the positioning of the cellulose fibers via cortical microtubules in diffuse growth. In particular, a stress feedback model predicts a circumferential pattern of fibers surrounding apical tissues and growing primordia, guided by the anisotropic curvature in such tissues. In contrast, during the initiation of tip growing root hairs, a star-like radial pattern has recently been observed. Here, we use detailed finite element models to analyze how a change in mechanical properties at the root hair initiation site can lead to star-like stress patterns in order to understand whether a stress-based feedback model can also explain the microtubule patterns seen during root hair initiation. We show that two independent mechanisms, individually or combined, can be sufficient to generate radial patterns. In the first, new material is added locally at the position of the root hair. In the second, increased tension in the initiation area provides a mechanism. Finally, we describe how a molecular model of Rho-of-plant (ROP) GTPases activation driven by auxin can position a patch of activated ROP protein basally along a 2D root epidermal cell plasma membrane, paving the way for models where mechanical and molecular mechanisms cooperate in the initial placement and outgrowth of root hairs.

Highlights

  • Most higher plants do not display cell migration and need to generate optimal shapes by adjusting growth both in terms of magnitude and directions

  • The results reported in this communication present two connected mechanisms concerning root hair outgrowth

  • The importance of growth for morphogenesis in plants has led to a large interest in how cortical microtubules organize into patterns regulating cellulose deposition and subsequent growth

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Summary

Introduction

Most higher plants do not display cell migration and need to generate optimal shapes by adjusting growth both in terms of magnitude and directions. Two main modes of growth are prevailing across the plant kingdom (Baskin, 2005; Rounds and Bezanilla, 2013). The first is diffuse growth where whole cells or tissues are expanding quite homogeneously, often anisotropically. The other mode of growth is tip growth, where expansion appears in a focused region of a cell. The growth is Modeling Root Hair Cells dependent on environmental signals and guided by cells, genetic and hormonal interactions (Chen et al, 2016). To effectuate the growth, manipulation of the stiff cell walls surrounding all cells is necessary (Cosgrove, 2005)

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