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Photo of Henrik Jönsson

Henrik Jönsson

Visiting professor

Photo of Henrik Jönsson

KATANIN and CLASP function at different spatial scales to mediate microtubule response to mechanical stress in Arabidopsis cotyledons

Author

  • Ryan C. Eng
  • René Schneider
  • Timon W. Matz
  • Ross Carter
  • David W. Ehrhardt
  • Henrik Jönsson
  • Zoran Nikoloski
  • Arun Sampathkumar

Summary, in English

Mechanical stress influences cell- and tissue-scale processes across all kingdoms. It remains challenging to delineate how mechanical stress, originating at these different length scales, impacts cell and tissue form. We combine growth tracking of cells, quantitative image analysis, as well as molecular and mechanical perturbations to address this problem in pavement cells of Arabidopsis thaliana cotyledon tissue. We show that microtubule organization based on chemical signals and cell-shape-derived mechanical stress varies during early stages of pavement cell development and is mediated by the evolutionary conserved proteins, KATANIN and CLASP. However, we find that these proteins regulate microtubule organization in response to tissue-scale mechanical stress to different extents in the cotyledon epidermis. Our results further demonstrate that regulation of cotyledon form is uncoupled from the mechanical-stress-dependent control of pavement cell shape that relies on microtubule organization governed by subcellular mechanical stress.

Department/s

  • Computational Biology and Biological Physics - Has been reorganised

Publishing year

2021

Language

English

Pages

6-3274

Publication/Series

Current Biology

Volume

31

Issue

15

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Biological Sciences

Keywords

  • cell shape
  • cytoskeleton
  • live-cell imaging
  • mechanical stress
  • mechano-response
  • microtubules
  • morphogenesis
  • morphology
  • pavement cells

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0960-9822