Abstract
SummaryPremitotic control of cell division orientation is critical for plant development, as cell walls prevent extensive cell remodelling or migration. Whilst many divisions are proliferative and add cells to existing tissues, some divisions are formative, and generate new tissue layers or growth axes. Such formative divisions are often asymmetric in nature, producing daughters with different fates. We have previously shown that in the Arabidopsis thaliana embryo, developmental asymmetry is correlated with geometric asymmetry, creating daughter cells of unequal volume. Such divisions are generated by division planes that deviate from a default “minimal surface area” rule. Inhibition of auxin response leads to reversal to this default, yet the mechanisms underlying division plane choice in the embryo have been unclear. Here we show that auxin-dependent division plane control involves alterations in cell geometry, but not in cell polarity or nuclear position. Through transcriptome profiling, we find that auxin regulates genes controlling cell wall and cytoskeleton properties. We confirm the involvement of microtubule (MT)-binding proteins in embryo division control. Topology of both MT and Actin cytoskeleton depend on auxin response, and genetically controlled MT or Actin depolymerization in embryos leads to disruption of asymmetric divisions, including reversion to the default. Our work shows how auxin-dependent control of MT- and Actin cytoskeleton properties interacts with cell geometry to generate asymmetric divisions during the earliest steps in plant development.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference63 articles.
1. Uber zellformen und seifenblasen;Bot. Zentralbl,1888
2. Über die anordnung der zellen in jungsten pflanzenteilen;Arb. Bot. Inst. Würzburg,1878
3. Zusatze und berichtigungen zu den 1851 veroffentlichten untersuchungen der entwicklung hoherer krytogamen;Jahrb. Wiss. Bot,1863
4. Mutations in the FASS gene uncouple pattern formation and morphogenesis in Arabidopsis development;Development,1994
5. Efflux-dependent auxin gradients establish the apical–basal axis of Arabidopsis
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献