Author:
Trinh Duy-Chi,Lionnet Claire,Trehin Christophe,Hamant Olivier
Abstract
AbstractHow organisms produce organs with robust shapes and sizes is still an open question. In recent years, the Arabidopsis sepal has been used as a model system to study this question because of its highly reproducible shape and size. One interesting aspect of the sepal is that its epidermis contains cells with very different sizes. Previous reports had qualitatively shown that sepals with more or less giant cells exhibit comparable final size and shape. Here we investigate this question using quantitative approaches. We find that a mixed population of cell size modestly contribute to the normal width of the sepal, but is not essential for its shape robustness. Furthermore, in a mutant with increased cell and organ growth variability, the change in final sepal shape caused by giant cells is exaggerated, but the shape robustness is not affected. This formally demonstrates that sepal shape variability is robust to cell size heterogeneity.Main conclusionA mixed population of cells with varied sizes plays a limited role in ensuring the symmetrical shape of the sepal, and is not essential for sepal shape robustness in Arabidopsis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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