| Literature DB >> 29150691 |
Jiyan Qi1, Binbin Wu1,2, Shiliang Feng3, Shouqin Lü2,3, Chunmei Guan1, Xiao Zhang2,3, Dengli Qiu4, Yingchun Hu5, Yihua Zhou1,2, Chuanyou Li1,2, Mian Long6,7, Yuling Jiao8,9.
Abstract
How appendages, such as plant leaves or animal limbs, develop asymmetric shapes remains a fundamental question in biology. Although ongoing research has revealed the genetic regulation of organ pattern formation, how gene activity ultimately directs organ shape remains unclear. Here, we show that leaf dorsoventral (adaxial-abaxial) polarity signals lead to mechanical heterogeneity of the cell wall, related to the methyl-esterification of cell-wall pectins in tomato and Arabidopsis. Numerical simulations predicate that mechanical heterogeneity is sufficient to produce the asymmetry seen in planar leaves. Experimental tests that alter pectin methyl-esterification, and therefore cell wall mechanical properties, support this model and lead to polar changes in gene expression, suggesting the existence of a feedback mechanism for mechanical signals in morphogenesis. Thus, mechanical heterogeneity within tissue may underlie organ shape asymmetry.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29150691 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-017-0008-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 15.793