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Section: New Results

Meristem functioning and development

In axis 2 work focuses on the creation of a virtual meristem, at cell resolution, able to integrate the recent results in developmental biology and to simulate the feedback loops between physiology and growth. The approach is subdivided into several sub-areas of research.

Data acquisition and design of meristem models

Participants : Frédéric Boudon, Christophe Godin, Christophe Pradal, Léo Guignard, Vincent Mirabet [RDP, ENS] , Jan Traas, Grégoire Malandain, Jean-Luc Verdeil [PHIV, AGAP] .

This research theme is supported by the iSam and Morphogenetics projects.

Shape analysis of meristems

(Jonathan Legrand, Frédéric Boudon, Christophe Godin, Yann Guedon, Pradeep Das [ENS Lyon])

At cellular resolution, we studied the organization of cells in the meristems. The MARS-ALT pipeline provides rich spatio-temporal data sets for analyzing the development of meristems. A first step consisted of designing a dedicated graph for efficiently representing the spatial (adjacency between cells) and temporal (cell division) relationships between cells. Various variables can be attached either to the vertices (e.g. cell volume, inertia axes) or the edges (e.g. wall surface, distance between cell centroids). This graph may be augmented by new variables resulting from various spatial or temporal filtering (e.g. cell volumetric growth). We are now designing models and algorithms for finding patterns in time courses of meristems. In particular, we are investigating spectral clustering methods in order to define homogeneous regions in terms of cell identities in the context of the PhD Work of Jonathan Legrand.

Transport models

Participants : Michael Walker, Christophe Godin, Etienne Farcot, Jan Traas, Yuan Yuan [University of Newfoundland, Canada] .

This research theme is supported by the ANR GeneShape and ERASysBio+ iSAM projects and Morphogenetics.

Active transport of the plant hormone auxin has been shown to play a key role in the initiation of organs at the shoot apex, and vein formation in both leaves and the shoot apical meristem. Polar localized membrane proteins of the PIN1 and AUX/LAX family facilitate this transport and observations and models suggest that the coherent organization of these proteins in the L1 layer is responsible for the creation of auxin maxima (surrounded by a depletion zone), which in turn triggers organ initiation close to the meristem center [58] [1] . Furthermore, canalized PIN allocations are thought to play a crucial role in vein formation in the leaf and in the L2. Previous studies have typically modeled the L1 and L2 with different models to explain different patterns of PIN allocations. In the last two years, we developed a unifying model showing that a unique flux-based model could be sufficient to explain PIN patterns in both L1 and L2 [27] . Contrary to our previous study [9] , here no change in the model parameters is needed for this. Our approach is based on inherent topological and geometrical differences between the L1 and L2, specifically their dimensionality and the distribution of sources and sinks.

In a different perspective, another study on auxin transport models have been submitted this year. In this work, a generic, adimensional flux-based model of auxin transport was studied using a combination of analytic and numeric approach. The steady-states with uniform auxin distribution were characterised for arbitrary tissues, and some of their bifurcations (loss of stability and Hopf) were described [18] . This work, initiated during an "Explorateur" project funded by Inria during the period October 2012-January 2013, results from the collaboration between E. Farcot and Y. Yuan (Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada).

Mechanical model

Participants : Olivier Ali, Christophe Godin, Benjamin Gilles, Frédéric Boudon, Jan Traas, Olivier Hamant [ENS-Lyon] , Arezki Boudaoud [ENS-Lyon] , Jérôme Chopard [University of Western Australia, Perth] .

This research theme is supported by the ANR VirtualFlower and Geneshape projects together with the Inria project Morphogenetics and the ERC from Jan Traas.

The rigid cell walls that surround plant cells are responsible for their shape. These structures are under constraint due to turgor pressure inside the cell. To study the changes of shape in plant tissues during organogenesis, we need a mechanical model of tissue development at cellular resolution. We developed such a model, in which walls are characterized by their mechanical properties like the Young modulus which describes the elasticity of the material. Wall deformation results from forces due to turgor pressure. Growth results from cell wall synthesis that is triggered when wall deformation exceeds a particular threshold. The final shape of the tissue integrates mechanically all the local deformations of each cell.

To model this process, we used a tensorial approach to describe both tissue deformation and stresses. Deformations were decomposed into elementary transformations that can be related to underlying biological processes. However, we showed that the observed deformations does not map directly local growth instructions given by genes and physiology in each cell. Instead, the growth is a two-stage process where genes are specifying how cell walls should yield to mechanical stresses. In this way, different regions in the tissue with different cell identities can have different growth properties. The final shape of the tissue results from the integration of all these mechanical properties and stresses at organ level under the growth force due to turgor pressure at tissue scale.

A paper describing the mechanical model and its application to model primorium formation in the shoot apical meristem has been submitted to PNAS in December. Additionally, a redesign of our mechanical model using the SOFA framework is being finalized.

Gene regulatory networks

Modeling gene activities within cells is of primary importance since cell identities correspond to stable combination of gene expression [25] .

Model integration

Participants : Frédéric Boudon, Christophe Godin, Eugenio Azpeitia, Laurent Laplaze, Jan Traas, François Parcy.

This research theme is supported by the ANR/BBSRC project iSam.

Our approach consists of building a programmable tissue which is able to accept different modeling components. This includes a central data structure representing the tissue in either 2-D or 3-D, which is able to grow in time, models of gene activity and regulation, models of signal exchange (physical and chemical) between cells and models of cell cycle (which includes cell division). For each modeling component, one or several approaches are investigated in depth, possibly at different temporal and spatial scales, using the data available from the partners (imaging, gene networks, and expression patterns). Approaches are compared and assessed on the same data. The objective of each submodel component will be to provide plugin components, corresponding to simplified versions of their models if necessary, that can be injected in the programmable tissue platform. This work is developed in collaboration with the RDP group at ENS-Lyon [56] and the CPIB group in Nottingham, UK [49] .