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Spatial and Temporal Analyses of Expansion and Cell Cycle in Sunflower Leaves1
A Common Pattern of Development for All Zones of a Leaf and Different Leaves of a Plant

Christine Granier and François Tardieu*

Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Laboratoire d'Ecophysiologie des Plantes sous Stress Environnementaux, 2 Place Viala, 34060 Montpellier, France

We have investigated the spatial distributions of expansion and cell cycle in sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) leaves located at two positions on the stem, from leaf initiation to the end of expansion. Relative expansion rate (RER) was analyzed by following the deformation of a grid drawn on the lamina; relative division rate (RDR) and flow-cytometry data were obtained in four zones perpendicular to the midrib. Calculations for determining in situ durations of the cell cycle and of S-G2-M in the epidermis are proposed. Area and cell number of a given leaf zone increased exponentially during the first two-thirds of the development duration. RER and RDR were constant and similar in all zones of a leaf and in all studied leaves during this period. Reduction in RER occurred afterward with a tip-to-base gradient and lagged behind that of RDR by 4 to 5 d in all zones. After a long period of constancy, cell-cycle duration increased rapidly and simultaneously within a leaf zone, with cells blocked in the G0-G1 phase of the cycle. Cells that began their cycle after the end of the period with exponential increase in cell number could not finish it, suggesting that they abruptly lost their competence to cross a critical step of the cycle. Differences in area and in cell number among zones of a leaf and among leaves of a plant essentially depended on the timing of two events, cessation of exponential expansion and of exponential division.


1   This work was supported by grants from the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique and the Centre Technique Interprofessionnel des Oléagineux Métropolitains.
*   Corresponding author; e-mail tardieu{at}ensam.inra.fr; fax 33-4-99-52-21-16.

Plant Physiol. (1998) 116: 991-1001
Copyright Clearance Center:   0032-0889/98/116/0991/11
© 1998 American Society of Plant Physiologists




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