Modeling the organization of the WUSCHEL expression domain in the shoot apical meristem
Abstract
Motivation: The above-ground tissues of higher plants are generated from a small region of cells situated at the plant apex called the shoot apical meristem. An important genetic control circuit modulating the size of the Arabidopsis thaliana meristem is a feed-back network between the CLAVATA3 and WUSCHEL genes. Although the expression patterns for these genes do not overlap, WUSCHEL activity is both necessary and sufficient (when expressed ectopically) for the induction of CLAVATA3 expression. However, upregulation of CLAVATA3 in conjunction with the receptor kinase CLAVATA1 results in the downregulation of WUSCHEL. Despite much work, experimental data for this network are incomplete and additional hypotheses are needed to explain the spatial locations and dynamics of these expression domains. Predictive mathematical models describing the system should provide a useful tool for investigating and discriminating among possible hypotheses, by determining which hypotheses best explain observed gene expression dynamics. Results: We are developing a method using in vivo live confocal microscopy to capture quantitative gene expression data and create templates for computational models. We present two models accounting for the organization of the WUSCHEL expression domain. Our preferred model uses a reaction-diffusion mechanism in which an activator induces WUSCHEL expression. This model is able to organize the WUSCHEL expression domain. In addition, the model predicts the dynamical reorganization seen in experiments where cells, including the WUSCHEL domain, are ablated, and it also predicts the spatial expansion of the WUSCHEL domain resulting from removal of the CLAVATA3 signal. Availability: An extended description of the model framework and image processing algorithms can be found at http://www.computableplant.org, together with additional results and simulation movies.
Additional Information
© 2005 The Author. Published by Oxford University Press. Received on January 15, 2005; accepted on March 27, 2005. We are grateful to Ylva Aspenberg for implementing the image background-extraction algorithm. This research was supported by NSF:FIBR award number EF-0330786. H.J. was supported in part by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation through Swegene.Attached Files
Published - bti1036.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 72532
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20161202-133833294
- NSF
- EF-0330786
- Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
- Created
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2016-12-02Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-11Created from EPrint's last_modified field