1998
The making of the architecture of the plant cell wall: How cells exploit geometry
Publication
Publication
PNAS , Volume 95 p. 7215- 7219
Cell wall deposition is a key process in the formation, growth, and differentiation of plant cells. The most important structural components of the wall are long cellulose microfibrils, which are synthesized by syntheses embedded in the plasma membrane. A fundamental question is how the microfibrils become oriented during deposition at the plasma membrane. The current textbook explanation for the orientation mechanism is a guidance system mediated by cortical microtubules. However, too many contraindications are known. In secondary cell walls for this to be a universal mechanism, particularly in the case of helicoidal arrangements, which occur in many situations. An additional construction mechanism involves liquid crystalline self-assembly [A. C. Neville (1993) Biology of Fibrous Composites: Development beyond the Cell Membrane (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, U.K)], but the required amount of bulk material that is able to equilibrate thermally is not normally present at any stage of the wall deposition process. Therefore, we have asked whether the complex ordered texture of helicoidal cell walls can be formed in the absence of direct cellular guidance mechanisms. We propose that they can be formed by a mechanism that is based on geometrical considerations. It explains the genesis of the complicated helicoidal texture and shows that the cell has intrinsic, versatile tools for creating a variety of textures. A compelling feature of the model is that local rules generate global order, a typical phenomenon of life.
Additional Metadata | |
---|---|
PNAS | |
Organisation | Theory of Biomolecular Matter |
Emons, A. M., & Mulder, B. (1998). The making of the architecture of the plant cell wall: How cells exploit geometry. PNAS, 95, 7215–7219. |