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Abstract Detail


Plant Development / Développement des plantes (CBA/ABC)

Holloway, David M [1], Harrison, Lionel G [2].

Pattern selection in plants: coupling chemical dynamics to surface growh in three dimensions.

We study by computation the interplay between the pattern formation of growth catalysts on a plant surface and the expansion of the surface to generate organismal shape. We consider the localization of morphogenetically active regions, and the occurrence within them of symmetry-breaking processes such as branching from an initially dome-shaped tip or meristem. Representation of a changing and growing 3-D shape is necessary, since 2-D work cannot distinguish, e.g., formation of an annulus from dichotomous branching. For the formation of patterns of chemical concentrations, we use the Brusselator reaction-diffusion model, applied on a hemispherical shell and generating patterns that initiate as surface spherical harmonics. The initial shape is hemispherical, represented as a mesh of triangles. These are combined into finite elements, each made up of all the triangles surrounding each node. Chemical pattern is converted into shape change by moving nodes outwards according to the concentration of growth catalyst at each, to relieve misfits caused by area increase of the finite element. New triangles are added to restore the refinement of the mesh in rapidly-growing regions. The postulated mechanism successfully generates: tip growth (or stalk extension by an apical meristem) to ten times original hemisphere height; tip flattening and resumption of apical advance; dichotomous branching and higher-order branching to make whorled structures. Control of branching plane in successive dichotomous branchings is tackled with partial success and clarification of the issues. The representation of a growing plant surface in computations by an expanding mesh that has no artefacts constraining changes of shape and symmetry has been achieved. We have shown that one type of pattern-forming mechanism, Turing-type reaction-diffusion, acting within a surface to pattern a growth catalyst, can generate some of the most important types of morphogenesis in plant development.


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1 - British Columbia Institute of Technology, Mathematics, 3700 Willingdon Ave., Burnaby, BC, V5G 3H2, Canada
2 - University of British Columbia, Chemistry, 2036 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z1, Canada

Keywords:
morphogenesis
pattern formation
surface expansion
symmetry breaking
finite element modelling
reaction-diffusion
tip growth
dichotomous branching
whorl formation
surface spherical harmonics
Micrasterias.

Presentation Type: Oral Paper:Papers for Sections
Session: 19
Location: 215/SUB
Date: Monday, July 28th, 2008
Time: 2:00 PM
Number: 19003
Abstract ID:603


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