Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants
Microtubules confined to the two-dimensional cortex of elongating plant cells must form a parallel yet dispersed array transverse to the elongation axis for proper cell wall expansion. Collisions between microtubules, which migrate via hybrid treadmilling, can result in plus-end entrainment (zipperi...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-304392018-01-05T17:24:46Z Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants Allard, Jun Microtubules confined to the two-dimensional cortex of elongating plant cells must form a parallel yet dispersed array transverse to the elongation axis for proper cell wall expansion. Collisions between microtubules, which migrate via hybrid treadmilling, can result in plus-end entrainment (zippering) or catastrophe. Here, I present (1) a cell-scale computational model of cortical microtubule organization and (2) a molecular-scale model for microtubule-cortex anchoring and collision-based interactions between microtubules. The first model treats interactions phenomenologically while the second addresses interactions by considering energetic competition between crosslinker binding, microtubule bending and microtubule polymerization. From the cell-scale model, we find that plus-end entrainment leads to self-organization of microtubules into parallel arrays, while collision-induced catastrophe does not. Catastrophe-inducing boundaries can tune the dominant orientation. Changes in dynamic-instability parameters, such as in mor1-1 mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana, can impede self-organization, in agreement with experiment. Increased entrainment, as seen in clasp-1 mutants, conserves self-organization, but delays its onset. Modulating the ability of cell edges to induce catastrophe, as the CLASP protein may do, can tune the dominant direction and regulate organization. The molecular-scale model predicts a higher probability of entrainment at lower collision angles and at longer unanchored lengths of plus-ends. The models lead to several testable predictions, including the effects of reduced microtubule severing in katanin mutants and variable membrane-anchor densities in different plants, including Arabidopsis cells and Tobacco cells. Science, Faculty of Mathematics, Department of Graduate 2010-12-16T22:06:59Z 2010-12-16T22:06:59Z 2010 2011-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30439 eng Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ University of British Columbia |
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English |
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Microtubules confined to the two-dimensional cortex of elongating plant cells must form a parallel yet dispersed array transverse to the elongation axis for proper cell wall expansion. Collisions between microtubules, which migrate via hybrid treadmilling, can result in plus-end entrainment (zippering) or catastrophe. Here, I present (1) a cell-scale computational model of cortical microtubule organization and (2) a molecular-scale model for microtubule-cortex anchoring and collision-based interactions between microtubules. The first model treats interactions phenomenologically while the second addresses interactions by considering energetic competition between crosslinker binding, microtubule bending and microtubule polymerization. From the cell-scale model, we find that plus-end entrainment leads to self-organization of microtubules into parallel arrays, while collision-induced catastrophe does not. Catastrophe-inducing boundaries can tune the dominant orientation. Changes in dynamic-instability parameters, such as in mor1-1 mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana, can impede self-organization, in agreement with experiment. Increased entrainment, as seen in clasp-1 mutants, conserves self-organization, but delays its onset. Modulating the ability of cell edges to induce catastrophe, as the CLASP protein may do, can tune the dominant direction and regulate organization. The molecular-scale model predicts a higher probability of entrainment at lower collision angles and at longer unanchored lengths of plus-ends. The models lead to several testable predictions, including the effects of reduced microtubule severing in katanin mutants and variable membrane-anchor densities in different plants, including Arabidopsis cells and Tobacco cells. === Science, Faculty of === Mathematics, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Allard, Jun |
spellingShingle |
Allard, Jun Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
author_facet |
Allard, Jun |
author_sort |
Allard, Jun |
title |
Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
title_short |
Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
title_full |
Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
title_fullStr |
Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
title_sort |
mathematics and biophysics of cortical microtubules in plants |
publisher |
University of British Columbia |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30439 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT allardjun mathematicsandbiophysicsofcorticalmicrotubulesinplants |
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1718582722329313280 |