PLoS Computational Biology (Jun 2019)

Coupling water fluxes with cell wall mechanics in a multicellular model of plant development.

  • Ibrahim Cheddadi,
  • Michel Génard,
  • Nadia Bertin,
  • Christophe Godin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. e1007121

Abstract

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The growth of plant organs is a complex process powered by osmosis that attracts water inside the cells; this influx induces simultaneously an elastic extension of the walls and pressure in the cells, called turgor pressure; above a threshold, the walls yield and the cells grow. Based on Lockhart's seminal work, various models of plant morphogenesis have been proposed, either for single cells, or focusing on the wall mechanical properties. However, the synergistic coupling of fluxes and wall mechanics has not yet been fully addressed in a multicellular model. This work lays the foundations of such a model, by simplifying as much as possible each process and putting emphasis on the coupling itself. Its emergent properties are rich and can help to understand plant morphogenesis. In particular, we show that the model can display a new type of lateral inhibitory mechanism that amplifies growth heterogeneities due e.g to cell wall loosening.