Abstract

Accurate sensing and responding to physical microenvironment are crucial for cell function and survival, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain elusive. Pollen tube (PT) provides a perfect single-cell model for studying mechanobiology since it's naturally subjected to complex mechanical instructions from the pistil during invasive growth. Recent reports have revealed discrepant PT behaviors between in vivo and flat, two-dimensional in vitro cultures. Here, we established the Stigma-style-transmitting tract (TT) Physical microenvironment Assay (SPA) to recapitulate pressure changes in the pistil. This biomimetic assay has enabled us to swiftly identify highly redundant genes, GEF8/9/11/12/13, as new regulators for maintaining PTs integrity during style-to-TT emergence. In contrast to normal growth on solid medium, SPA successfully phenocopied gef8/9/11/12/13 PT in vivo growth-arrest deficiency. Our results suggest the existence of distinct signaling pathways regulating in vivo and in vitro PT integrity maintenance, underscoring the necessity of faithfully mimicking the physical microenvironment for studying plant cell biology.

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