4.8 Article

Cellular Heterogeneity in Pressure and Growth Emerges from Tissue Topology and Geometry

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 8, Pages 1504-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.02.027

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institut Universitaire de France
  2. ERC [ERC-2012-StG307387]
  3. Simone and Cino Del Duca Foundation
  4. EMBO Long-term Fellowship [EMBO ALTF 168-2015]
  5. Agropolis Foundation grant (MecaFruit3D)
  6. Forschungskredit Fellowship - University of Zurich [K-74502-04-01]

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Cell-to-cell heterogeneity prevails in many systems, as exemplified by cell growth, although the origin and function of such heterogeneity are often unclear. In plants, growth is physically controlled by cell wall mechanics and cell hydrostatic pressure, alias turgor pressure. Whereas cell wall heterogeneity has received extensive attention, the spatial variation of turgor pressure is often overlooked. Here, combining atomic force microscopy and a physical model of pressurized cells, we show that turgor pressure is heterogeneous in the Arabidopsis shoot apical meristem, a population of stem cells that generates all plant aerial organs. In contrast with cell wall mechanical properties that appear to vary stochastically between neighboring cells, turgor pressure anticorrelates with cell size and cell neighbor number (local topology), in agreement with the prediction by our model of tissue expansion, which couples cell wall mechanics and tissue hydraulics. Additionally, our model predicts two types of correlations between pressure and cellular growth rate, where high pressure may lead to fasteror slower-than-average growth, depending on cell wall extensibility, yield threshold, osmotic pressure, and hydraulic conductivity. The meristem exhibits one of these two regimes, depending on conditions, suggesting that, in this tissue, water conductivity may contribute to growth control. Our results unravel cell pressure as a source of patterned heterogeneity and illustrate links between local topology, cell mechanical state, and cell growth, with potential roles in tissue homeostasis.

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