The power and control of gravitropic movements in plants: a biomechanical and systems biology view

被引:129
作者
Moulia, Bruno [1 ,2 ]
Fournier, Meriem [3 ]
机构
[1] INRA, PIAF, UMR 547, F-63100 Clermont Ferrand 01, France
[2] Univ Blaise Pascal, PIAF, UMR 547, F-63177 Aubiere, France
[3] AgroParisTech, ENGREF, LERFOB, UMR 1092, F-54000 Nancy, France
关键词
Architectural modelling; biomechanics; functional ecology; gravisensing; gravitropism; growth kinematics; mechanoperception; phenotyping; reaction wood; systems biology; GROWTH-RATE; INFLORESCENCE STEMS; CUCUMBER HYPOCOTYLS; SHAPE REGULATION; IMAGE-ANALYSIS; ROOT-GROWTH; MAIZE LEAF; WOOD; CURVATURE; CELL;
D O I
10.1093/jxb/ern341
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The study of gravitropic movements in plants has enjoyed a long history of research going back to the pioneering works of the 19th century and the famous book entitled 'The power of movement in plants' by Charles and Francis Darwin. Over the last few decades, the emphasis has shifted towards the cellular and molecular biology of gravisensing and the onset of auxin gradients across the organs. However, our understanding of plant movement cannot be completed before quantifying spatio-temporal changes in curvature and how they are produced through the motor process of active bending and controlled by gravisensing. This review sets out to show how combining approaches borrowed from continuum mechanics (kinematic imaging, structural modelling) with approaches from physiology and modern molecular biology has made it possible to generate integrative biomechanical models of the processes involved in gravitropism at several levels. The physiological and biomechanical bases are reviewed and two of the most complete integrative models of the gravireaction organ available are then compared, highlighting how the comparison between movements driven by differential growth and movements driven by reaction wood formation in woody organs has provided highly informative key insights. The advantages of these models as tools for analysing genetic control through quantitative process-based phenotyping as well as for identifying target traits for ecological studies are discussed. It is argued that such models are tools for a systems biology approach to gravitropic movement that has the potential to resolve at least some of the research questions raised 150 years ago.
引用
收藏
页码:461 / 486
页数:26
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