Abstract
The development of multicellular organisms requires coordinated cell divisions for the production of diverse cell types and body plan elaboration and growth. There are two main types of cell divisions: proliferative or symmetric divisions, which produce more cells of a given type, and formative or asymmetric divisions, which produce cells of different types. Because plant cells are surrounded by cell walls, the orientation of plant cell divisions is particularly important in cell fate specification and tissue or organ morphology. The cellular organization of the Arabidopsis thaliana root makes an excellent tool to study how oriented cell division contributes to tissue patterning during organ development. To understand how division plane orientation in a specific genotype or growth condition may impact organ or tissue development, a detailed characterization of cell division orientation is required. Here we describe a confocal microscopy-based, live imaging method for Arabidopsis root tips to examine the 3D orientations of cell division planes and quantify formative, proliferative, and atypical endodermal cell divisions.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have