Reinhardt Didier, Frenz Martin, Mandel Therese, Kuhlemeier Cris
Institute of Plant Science, University of Berne, Altenbergrain 21, 3013 Bern, Switzerland.
Development. 2005 Jan;132(1):15-26. doi: 10.1242/dev.01544. Epub 2004 Nov 24.
Leaves are arranged according to regular patterns, a phenomenon referred to as phyllotaxis. Important determinants of phyllotaxis are the divergence angle between successive leaves, and the size of the leaves relative to the shoot axis. Young leaf primordia are thought to provide positional information to the meristem, thereby influencing the positioning of new primordia and hence the divergence angle. On the contrary, the meristem signals to the primordia to establish their dorsoventral polarity, which is a prerequisite for the formation of a leaf blade. These concepts originate from classical microsurgical studies carried out between the 1920s and the 1970s. Even though these techniques have been abandoned in favor of genetic analysis, the resulting insights remain a cornerstone of plant developmental biology. Here, we employ new microsurgical techniques to reassess and extend the classical studies on phyllotaxis and leaf polarity. Previous experiments have indicated that the isolation of an incipient primordium by a tangential incision caused a change of divergence angle between the two subsequent primordia, indicating that pre-existing primordia influence further phyllotaxis. Here, we repeat these experiments and compare them with the results of laser ablation of incipient primordia. Furthermore, we explore to what extent the different pre-existing primordia influence the size and position of new organs, and hence phyllotaxis. We propose that the two youngest primordia (P1 and P2) are sufficient for the approximate positioning of the incipient primordium (I1), and therefore for the perpetuation of the generative spiral, whereas the direct contact neighbours of I1 (P2 and P3) control its delimitation and hence its exact size and position. Finally, we report L1-specific cell ablation experiments suggesting that the meristem L1 layer is essential for the dorsoventral patterning of leaf primordia.
叶子按照规则模式排列,这种现象被称为叶序。叶序的重要决定因素是相继长出的叶子之间的发散角,以及叶子相对于茎轴的大小。幼叶原基被认为向分生组织提供位置信息,从而影响新原基的定位,进而影响发散角。相反,分生组织向原基发出信号以建立其背腹极性,这是叶片形成的先决条件。这些概念源于20世纪20年代至70年代进行的经典显微外科研究。尽管这些技术已被放弃而采用基因分析,但由此获得的见解仍然是植物发育生物学的基石。在这里,我们采用新的显微外科技术来重新评估和扩展关于叶序和叶极性的经典研究。先前的实验表明,通过切向切口分离初期原基会导致随后两个原基之间的发散角发生变化,这表明预先存在的原基会影响进一步的叶序。在这里,我们重复这些实验,并将其与初期原基激光消融的结果进行比较。此外,我们探究不同的预先存在的原基在多大程度上影响新器官的大小和位置,从而影响叶序。我们提出,最年轻的两个原基(P1和P2)足以对初期原基(I1)进行大致定位,因此足以维持发生螺旋,而I1的直接接触邻居(P2和P3)控制其界定,从而控制其确切大小和位置。最后,我们报告了L1特异性细胞消融实验,表明分生组织L1层对于叶原基的背腹模式形成至关重要。