Abstract
AbstractOrgan sizes and shapes are highly reproducible, or robust, within a species and individuals.Arabidopsis thalianasepals, which are the leaf-like organs that enclose flower buds, have consistent size and shape, which indicates robust development. Counterintuitively, variability in cell growth rate over time and between cells facilitates robust development because cumulative cell growth averages to a uniform rate. Here we investigate how sepal morphogenesis is robust to changes in cell division but not robust to changes in cell growth variability. We live image and quantitatively compare the development of sepals with increased or decreased cell division rate (lgomutant andLGOoverexpression, respectively), a mutant with altered cell growth variability (ftsh4), and double mutants combining these. We find that robustness is preserved when cell division rate changes because there is no change in the spatial pattern of growth. Meanwhile when robustness is lost inftsh4mutants, cell growth accumulates unevenly, and cells have disorganized growth directions. Thus, we demonstratein vivothat both cell growth rate and direction average in robust development, preserving robustness despite changes in cell division.Summary statementRobust sepal development is preserved despite changes in cell division rate and is characterized by spatiotemporal averaging of heterogeneity in cell growth rate and direction.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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