Abstract |
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Morphogenesis of plant, fungal, and bacterial
cells depends heavily on surface mechanics and in particular on
the stiff wall that surrounds these cells. In this paper,
we show that tubular rubber balloons offer a useful
physical model of tip growth morphogenesis. In particular, the
balloons reproduce accurately the inhomogeneity and anisotropy of
surface expansion observed during tip growth. Comparison between
the two systems has led to a simple model of tip growth that
assumes linear constitutive relations with inhomogeneous material
properties. The strain rate profile predicted by the model
is a surprisingly good fit to the data given the
model’s simplicity. We suggest that a meridional gradient
of compliance or extensibility is the key mechanical feature that
explains the similar strain rate profiles in tip-growing
cells across broad taxonomic groups as well as in rubber balloon
analogs.
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Keywords
anisotropy, cell morphogenesis, inhomogeneity, rubber balloon, thin pressurized shell, tip growth
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Authors
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