Fibrous network nature of plant cell walls enables tunable mechanics for development

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Abstract

During plant development, the mechanical properties of the cell walls must be tuned to regulate the growth of the cells. Cell growth involves significant stretching of the cell walls, yet little is known about the mechanical properties of cell walls under such substantial deformation, or how these mechanical properties change to regulate development. Here, we investigated the mechanical behavior of the Arabidopsis leaf epidermal cells being stretched. We found that the mechanical properties arise from the cell wall, which behaves as a fibrous network material. The epidermis exhibited a non-linear stiffening behavior that fell into three regimes. Each regime corresponded to distinct nonlinear behaviors in terms of transverse deformation (i.e., Poisson effect) and unrecoverable deformation (i.e., plasticity). Using a model, we demonstrated that the transition from reorientation and bending-dominated to stretch-dominated deformation modes of cellulose microfibrils cause these nonlinear behaviors. We found the stiffening behavior is more pronounced at later developmental stages. Finally, we show the spiral2-2 mutant has anisotropic mechanical properties, likely contributing to the spiraling of leaves. Our findings reveal the fibrous network nature of cell walls gives a high degree of tunability in mechanical properties, which allows cells to adjust these properties to support proper development.

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