Abstract

The topology of a cellular pattern, which means the spatial arrangement of cells, directly corresponds with cell packing, which is crucial for tissue and organ functioning. The topological features of cells that are typically analyzed are the number of their neighbors and the cell area. To date, the objects of most topological studies have been the growing cells of the surface tissues of plant and animal organs. Some of these researches also provide verification of Lewis’s Law concerning the linear correlation between the number of neighboring cells and the cell area. Our aim was to analyze the cellular topology and applicability of Lewis’s Law to an anisotropically growing plant organ. The object of our study was the root apex of radish. Based on the tensor description of plant organ growth, we specified the level of anisotropy in specific zones (the root proper, the columella of the cap and the lateral parts of the cap) and in specific types of both external (epidermis) and internal tissues (stele and ground tissue) of the apex. The strongest anisotropy occurred in the root proper, while both zones of the cap showed an intermediate level of anisotropy of growth. Some differences in the topology of the cellular pattern in the zones were also detected; in the root proper, six-sided cells predominated, while in the root cap columella and in the lateral parts of the cap, most cells had five neighbors. The correlation coefficient rL between the number of neighboring cells and the cell area was high in the apex as a whole as well as in all of the zones except the root proper and in all of the tissue types except the ground tissue. In general, Lewis’s Law was fulfilled in the anisotropically growing radish root apex. However, the level of the applicability (rL value) of Lewis’s Law was negatively correlated with the level of the anisotropy of growth, which may suggest that in plant organs in the regions of anisotropic growth, the number of neighboring cells is less dependent on the cell size.

Highlights

  • Plant organs grow symplastically, that is to say that the cells within the organs grow in a highly coordinated manner (Priestley 1930; Erickson 1986)

  • The highly organized growth of plant organs is strictly connected with the topology of their cellular pattern

  • A small quiescent center (QC) is localized on the pole of the root proper

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Summary

Introduction

That is to say that the cells within the organs grow in a highly coordinated manner (Priestley 1930; Erickson 1986). In the axial sections of the plant shoot and root apices, the cells are densely packed and arranged in continuous files and the cell wall network can be described by two families of continuous and mutually orthogonal lines—periclines and anticlines—which are parallel and perpendicular to the surface of an organ, respectively (Sachs 1879, 1887). This pattern of anti- and periclines is maintained during the steady growth of an organ (Sachs 1887; Hejnowicz 1982)

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