4.7 Article

A mechano-sensing mechanism for waving in plant roots

期刊

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-14093-1

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资金

  1. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), India [CRG/2021/002734]
  2. Israeli Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Eugene 30 Kandel Knowledge Centers) as part of the Root of the Matter: The root zone knowledge center for leveraging 31 modern agriculture
  3. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [1301/17. 32]

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This paper proposes a mechano-sensing model to explain the root-waving phenomenon in Arabidopsis, which combines the friction induced by gravitropism, the elasticity of the root, and the anchoring of the root to agar by thin hairs. By performing experiments and analyzing the results, the researchers demonstrate that the model can explain the effect of inclination angles on the wavelength and other properties of growing roots. They also show that the prevalence of waving in different plant species is related to root thickness, as predicted by the model.
Arabidopsis roots grown on inclined agar surfaces exhibit unusual sinusoidal patterns known as root-waving. The origin of these patterns has been ascribed to both genetic and environmental factors. Here we propose a mechano-sensing model for root-waving, based on a combination of friction induced by gravitropism, the elasticity of the root and the anchoring of the root to the agar by thin hairs, and demonstrate its relevance to previously obtained experimental results. We further test the applicability of this model by performing experiments in which we measure the effect of gradually changing the inclination angles of the agar surfaces on the wavelength and other properties of the growing roots. We find that the observed dynamics is different than the dynamics reported in previous works, but that it can still be explained using the same mechano-sensing considerations. This is supported by the fact that a scaling relation derived from the model describes the observed dependence of the wavelength on the tilt angle for a large range of angles. We also compare the prevalence of waving in different plant species and show that it depends on root thickness as predicted by the model. The results indicate that waving can be explained using mechanics and gravitropism alone and that mechanics may play a greater role in root growth and form than was previously considered.

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