4.7 Article

The Arabidopsis trichome is an active mechanosensory switch

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 40, Issue 5, Pages 611-621

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.12728

Keywords

apoplast pH shift; calcium oscillation; force focusing; mechanical buckling; mechanosensing; wall taper

Categories

Funding

  1. Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation Division of the National Science Foundation [CMMI-1102803]
  2. Glenn Allen and Gladys Levis Allen
  3. Major International Joint Research Program of China [11120101002]
  4. National 111 Project of China [B06024]
  5. China Young 1000-Talent Program and Shaanxi 100-Talent Program
  6. China Scholarship Council
  7. Chinese Ministry of Education
  8. National Science Foundation [DBI-1337680]

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Trichomes (hair cells') on Arabidopsis thaliana stem and leaf surfaces provide a range of benefits arising from their shape and disposition. These include tempting herbivores to sample constitutive toxins before they reach the bulk of the tissue. We asked whether, in addition, small mechanical disturbances such as an insect can make elicit signals that might help the plant respond to herbivory. We imaged, pressed and brushed trichomes in several ways, most notably with confocal microscopy of trichomes transgenically provided with apoplastic pH reporter apo-pHusion and cytosolic Ca2+ reporter cameleon. In parallel, we modelled trichome wall mechanics with finite element analysis. The stimulated trichome focuses force on a pliant zone and the adjoining podium of the stalk. A buckling instability can further focus force on a skirt of cells surrounding the podium, eliciting oscillations of cytosolic Ca2+ and shifts in apoplastic pH. These observations represent active physiological response. Modelling establishes that the effectiveness of force focusing and buckling is due to the peculiar tapering wall structure of the trichome. Hypothetically, these active mechanosensing functions enhance toxin synthesis above constitutive levels, probably via a priming process, thus minimizing the costly accumulation of toxins in the absence of herbivore attack but assuring rapid build-up when needed.

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