Abstract

Invasive or penetrative growth is critical for developmental and reproductive processes (e.g., pollen tube penetration of pistils) and disease progression (e.g., cancer metastasis and fungal hyphae invasion). The invading or penetrating cells experience drastic changes in mechanical pressure from the surroundings and must balance growth with cell integrity. Here, we show that Arabidopsis pollen tubes sense and/or respond to mechanical changes via a cell-surface receptor kinase Buddha's Paper Seal 1 (BUPS1) while emerging from compressing female tissues. BUPS1-defective pollen tubes fail to maintain cell integrity after emergence from these tissues. The mechano-transduction function of BUPS1 is established by using a microfluidic channel device mimicking the mechanical features of the invivo growth path. BUPS1-based mechano-transduction activates Rho-like GTPase from Plant 1 (ROP1) GTPase to promote exocytosis that facilitates secretion of BUPS1's ligands for mechanical signal amplification and cell wall rigidification in pollen tubes. These findings uncover a membrane receptor-based mechano-transduction system for cells to cope with the physical challenges during invasive or penetrative growth.

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