Abstract
AbstractUnlike animal development, plant organ growth is widely accepted to be determined by cell division without any contribution of cell elimination. We investigated this paradigm during Arabidopsis lateral root formation when growth of the new primordia (LRP) from pericycle-derived stem cells deep inside the root is reportedly facilitated by remodeling of the walls of overlying cells without apparent cell death. However, we observed the induction of marker genes for cell types undergoing developmental cell death in several cells overlying the growing LRP. Transmission electron microscopy, time-lapse confocal and light sheet microscopy techniques were used to establish that cell death occurred at least in a subset of endodermal LRP-overlying cells during organ emergence. Significantly, organ emergence was retarded in mutants lacking a positive cell death regulator, and restored by inducing cell death in cells overlying LRP. Hence, we conclude that in the case of LRP, cell elimination contributes to organ growth.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory