eLife (May 2021)

Organ geometry channels reproductive cell fate in the Arabidopsis ovule primordium

  • Elvira Hernandez-Lagana,
  • Gabriella Mosca,
  • Ethel Mendocilla-Sato,
  • Nuno Pires,
  • Anja Frey,
  • Alejandro Giraldo-Fonseca,
  • Caroline Michaud,
  • Ueli Grossniklaus,
  • Olivier Hamant,
  • Christophe Godin,
  • Arezki Boudaoud,
  • Daniel Grimanelli,
  • Daphné Autran,
  • Célia Baroux

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.66031
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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In multicellular organisms, sexual reproduction requires the separation of the germline from the soma. In flowering plants, the female germline precursor differentiates as a single spore mother cell (SMC) as the ovule primordium forms. Here, we explored how organ growth contributes to SMC differentiation. We generated 92 annotated 3D images at cellular resolution in Arabidopsis. We identified the spatio-temporal pattern of cell division that acts in a domain-specific manner as the primordium forms. Tissue growth models uncovered plausible morphogenetic principles involving a spatially confined growth signal, differential mechanical properties, and cell growth anisotropy. Our analysis revealed that SMC characteristics first arise in more than one cell but SMC fate becomes progressively restricted to a single cell during organ growth. Altered primordium geometry coincided with a delay in the fate restriction process in katanin mutants. Altogether, our study suggests that tissue geometry channels reproductive cell fate in the Arabidopsis ovule primordium.

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