Author:
Tsugawa Satoru,Miyake Yuzuki,Okamoto Keishi,Toyota Masatsugu,Yagi Hiroki,Terao Morita Miyo,Hara-Nishimura Ikuko,Demura Taku,Ueda Haruko
Abstract
AbstractGravitropism is the plant organ bending in response to gravity, while a straightening mechanism prevents bending beyond the gravitropic set-point angle. The promotion and prevention of bending occur simultaneously around the inflorescence stem tip. How these two opposing forces work together and what part of the stem they affect are unknown. To understand the mechanical forces involved, we rotated wild type and organ-straightening-deficient mutant (myosin xif xik) Arabidopsis plants to a horizontal position to initiate bending. The mutant stems started to bend before the wild-type stems, which led us to hypothesize that the force preventing bending was weaker in mutant. We modeled the wild-type and mutant stems as elastic rods, and evaluated two parameters: an organ-angle-dependent gravitropic-responsive parameter (β) and an organ-curvature-dependent proprioceptive-responsive parameter (γ). Our model showed that these two parameters were lower in mutant than in wild type, implying that, unexpectedly, both promotion and prevention of bending are weak in mutant. Subsequently, finite element method simulations revealed that the compressive stress in the middle of the stem was significantly lower in wild type than in mutant. The results of this study show that myosin-XIk-and-XIf-dependent organ straightening adjusts the stress distribution to achieve a mechanically favorable shape.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Hirao Taro Foundation of KONAN GAKUEN for Academic Research
MEXT KAKENHI
NEXT KAKENHI
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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