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Plant Physiol. (1998) 118: 1139-1145
Root-Growth Behavior of the Arabidopsis Mutant
rgr11
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ABSTRACT |
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In this study we investigated the kinetics of the gravitropic response of the Arabidopsis mutant rgr1 (reduced root gravitropism). Although the rate of curvature in rgr1, which is allelic to axr4, was smaller than in the wild type (ecotype Wassilewskija), curvature was initiated in the same region of the root, the distal elongation zone. The time lag for the response was unaffected in the mutant; however, the gravitropic response of rgr1 contained a feature not found in the wild type: when roots growing along the surface of an agar plate were gravistimulated, there was often an upward curvature that initiated in the central elongation zone. Because this response was dependent on the tactile environment of the root, it most likely resulted from the superposition of the waving/coiling phenomenon onto the gravitropic response. We found that the frequency of the waving pattern and circumnutation, a cyclic endogenous pattern of root growth, was the same in rgr1 and in the wild type, so the waving/coiling phenomenon is likely governed by circumnutation patterns. The amplitudes of these oscillations may then be selectively amplified by tactile stimulation to provide a directional preference to the slanting.
Although plant roots appear superficially to be symmetrical, their
growth patterns can be asymmetrical. An example of asymmetrical growth
patterns in a seemingly symmetrical environment is the skewed, wavy
pattern observed in the roots of some ecotypes of Arabidopsis grown on
inclined plates of agar (Okada and Shimura, 1990
In the former model it is postulated that thigmotropism of the root tip
causes a reversal in the direction of rotation of cell files and,
therefore, a reversal in the direction of tip growth. Subsequent
thigmostimulation of the root tip results in another reversal of
cell-file rotation, causing the root to grow in a wavy pattern along
the agar surface. Gravitropic sensitivity provides thigmostimulation by
giving the root a tendency to grow into the agar.
According to the circumnutation/gravitropism model, the wavy pattern of
root growth on inclined surfaces results from an endogenous pattern of
root growth (circumnutation) interacting with the gravitropic response,
which causes the roots to grow downward. Because root circumnutation
usually has a chirality favoring the clockwise direction, as viewed
looking downward along the root axis (Baillaud, 1962 Because gravitropism serves an important role in these models of the
waving pattern of growth, we wanted to investigate the relationships
between this waving phenomenon and gravitropism and other growth
behaviors in the gravitropism-deficient mutant rgr1
(reduced root gravitropism). The
mutant was isolated from the DuPont T-DNA insertional mutagenesis
collection in the Arabidopsis Wassilewskija ecotype by Simmons et al.
(1995a) We have developed an automated video-digitizer system for detailed
measurement of the growth and curvature of roots of Arabidopsis. We
used this new system to compare the kinetics of gravitropism and other
growth behaviors between the roots of rgr1 and wild-type seedlings in a series of different tactile environments. These comparisons provide insight into the basis of the waving/coiling growth
phenomenon.
Plant Material
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INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
, 1992
; Simmons et al.,
1995a
; also see Fig. 1A). The waving pattern is caused by a series of
bends in the root that alternate in direction. The skew arises from a
nonrandom preference by the root in the direction of bending relative
to the vertical. There is a strict correlation between the direction of
curvature for each bend of the root and the orientation (left or right)
of the helical spirals formed by epidermal cell files, suggesting that the pattern is caused by a succession of left- and right-oriented processes (Rutherford and Masson, 1996
). The pattern of wavy growth has
been suggested to result primarily from an interaction of gravitropism
and thigmotropism (Okada and Shimura, 1990
, 1992
) or from an
interaction of gravitropism and circumnutation (Maher and Martindale,
1980
; Simmons et al., 1995b
).

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Figure 1.
Waving/coiling patterns for seedlings of wild type
(ecotype Wassilewskija [Ws]) and rgr1. The roots are
growing on the surface of agar (1%, w/v) plates. A to C, Wild-type
seedlings growing on plates tilted by angles of +30°, 0°, or
30°. D to F, rgr1 seedlings oriented at the same
angles.
; Johnsson, 1997
,
and refs. therein), circumnutation may be able to provide the
directional preference for the wavy growth. However, this slanting
preference did not occur in roots embedded in agar, on a soft agar
surface, or on a surface slanted so that gravitropism tended to pull
the roots away from the agar surface (Rutherford and Masson, 1996
; also
see Fig. 1C). Therefore, asymmetrical mechanical stimulation, which
these treatments minimize, is involved in the slanting response in some
manner.
and is allelic to the axr4 mutant isolated by Hobbie
and Estelle (1995)
. Primary roots of these mutants are characterized by
reduced gravitropism, as indicated by a slower rate of gravitropic
curvature (Hobbie and Estelle, 1995
) and more random orientation about
the vertical after gravitropic response (Simmons et al., 1995a
). This
confirms the importance of gravitropism in the waving phenomenon,
because the roots of rgr1 seedlings grown on inclined
surfaces do not form wavy patterns, but instead form circular coils
that have the same directional preference as the wild-type slanting
preference (Simmons et al., 1995b
; Fig. 1D). Roots of rgr1
seedlings also exhibit resistance to growth inhibition by auxin, which
may explain their reduced gravitropic sensitivity.
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
),
and 1 mM Mes, pH 5.8. The rows of seeds were placed on the
agar surface perpendicular to the cylindrical axis of the dish so that
the roots would grow along the surface or on a surface parallel to the
axis, so that the roots would grow downward through the agar. The Petri
dishes were either placed immediately in a culture room under
continuous white light from fluorescent lamps (F30T8-CW, Sylvania) with
a fluence rate of approximately 47 µm m
2
s
1 at a temperature of 23°C, or they were
refrigerated at 4°C for 1 to 6 d before being transferred to the
culture room. The Petri dishes were placed vertically or at the
indicated angle of tilt and used for experimentation when the seedlings
were 4 to 5 d old.
Video-Digitizer System
The seedlings were viewed by a CCD (charge-coupled device) camera (Marshall Electronics, Culver City, CA) connected to a computer via a frame-grabber circuit board (ImageNation, Beaverton, OR). The roots were illuminated from behind with a fiber-optic illuminator (Fiber Lite, Leica) or with an IR light-emitting diode (Radio Shack, Fort Worth, TX). No difference in growth or response was observed between the two light conditions.
Interaction of Gravitropism and Tactile Stimulation
. The
new version of ADAPT measures the rate of elongation of the opposite
flanks of the root as well as the angles (relative to vertical) of
different segments of the root, defined by their distance from the root
tip. The software determines total elongation on opposite sides of the
root by tracing the root edges from the calculated root-tip position to
the position of fixed reference points in the nonelongating region.
Regression of the changes in length of a side gives its elongation
rate. ADAPT defines segments of the root by searching along arcs of
fixed radius for the edges of the root (Fig.
2). A particular segment can then be
described by a line segment connecting the midpoints of the arcs
defining the boundaries of the segment. The angle of this line segment from the vertical is then calculated as a function of time.

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Figure 2.
Logic of custom software for measurement of length
and segment angles of roots. A key feature of the software is its
ability to identify the edges of the root based on a user-defined
threshold luminous intensity and record that pixel location. Black and
white arcs denote segment limits as determined by the search routine of
the software. The size of each segment is selected by the user and
input as a searching radius. Black arcs indicate the limits of
odd-numbered segments (1, 3, 5, etc.) and white arcs indicate the
limits of even-numbered segments (2, 4, 6, etc.). Segment angle was
determined by first finding the line connecting the edge points of the
root at a given search distance, then determining the angle of the line
connecting the midpoints of the two limit lines relative to vertical.
The overlapping process used to define segment limits increases the
resolution of angle measurement. By definition the segments remain a
fixed distance relative to the root tip as the root elongates. Total
length of each edge is measured from the tip to a user-defined basal
point in the mature region of the root.
Circumnutation and Calculation of Curvature
To observe the direction of circumnutation in a horizontal plane, root growth was measured in two perpendicular planes by placing two cameras at right angles to one another. The direction of curvature in the horizontal plane was then found by plotting the angle of the root tip in one plane in relation to the angle in the other. The curvature (the reciprocal of the radius of curvature) of points along this curve was calculated using seven-point quadratic numerical differentiation formulae, as described by Silk and Erickson (1978)Conventions of Terminology
Angle of Plate Orientation
For purposes of this report, plates oriented vertically with the roots growing downward were assigned an angle of 0; plates tilted so that the gravity vector pointed from the root toward the agar surface were assigned positive values of tilt; and plates inclined so that the gravity vector was away from the surface were assigned negative values.Direction of Asymmetric Growth and Plate Rotation
For this report we assumed that the viewer's perspective is looking at the seedling through the Petri dish cover with the seedling in front of the agar surface. From this perspective the directions of rotation are consistent with those in previous reports of root coiling (Mirza, 1987| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
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Gravitropism and the Waving Response
The wavy growth pattern of a wild-type root growing along an inclined plane has a directional preference to the left (Okada and Shimura, 1990
Upward Curvature and Altered Tactile and Light Environments
Circumnutation
These investigations of root behavior illustrate the complexities
in growth kinetics that can occur as a result of the interactions of
separate growth responses. Roots of rgr1 seedlings tended to slant to the left when growing on vertical plates. This slanting contributed to the observed gravitropism kinetics in a manner dependent
on the direction of rotation (Fig. 4), suggesting that the relative
magnitudes of the early curvature responses in rgr1 and the
wild type may not have accurately reflected the difference in the
strengths of the true gravitropic response. This was made more evident
by the fact that the kinetics of the overall response of wild-type
roots were not dependent on the direction of gravistimulation. Therefore, the magnitude of the gravitropic response in the wild type
varied with the direction of rotation and offset the slanting preference of the root.
Received May 15, 1998;
accepted September 11, 1998.
Baillaud L
(1962)
Les mouvements d'exploration et d'enroulement des plantes volubiles.
Handb Pflanzenphysiol
17:
637-715
Hobbie L,
Estelle MA
(1995)
The axr4 auxin-resistant mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana define a gene important for root gravitropism and lateral root initiation.
Plant J
7:
211-220
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Ishikawa H,
Evans ML
(1997)
Novel software for analysis of root gravitropism: comparative response patterns of Arabidopsis wild-type and axr1 seedlings.
Plant Cell Environ
20:
919-928
[CrossRef][Medline]
Johnsson A
(1979)
Circumnutation.
In
W Haupt,
E Feinleib,
eds, Encyclopedia of Plant Physiology, New Series, Vol 7.
Springer-Verlag, Berlin, pp 627-646
Johnsson A
(1997)
Circumnutations: results from recent experiments on earth and in space.
Planta
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S147-S158
[Medline]
Maher EP,
Martindale SJB
(1980)
Mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana with altered responses to auxins and gravity.
Biochem Genet
18:
1041-1053
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Marinelli B,
Gomarasca S,
Soave C
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A pleiotropic Arabidopsis thaliana mutant with inverted root chirality.
Planta
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196-205
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Mirza JI
(1987)
The effects of light and gravity on the horizontal curvature of roots of gravitropic and agravitropic Arabidopsis thaliana L.
Plant Physiol
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118-120
Mullen JL, Ishikawa H, Evans ML (1998) Analysis of changes in
relative elemental growth rate patterns in the elongation zone of
Arabidopsis roots upon gravistimulation. Planta (in
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Murashige T,
Skoog F
(1962)
A revised medium for rapid growth and bioassays with tobacco tissue cultures.
Physiol Plant
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473-497
[CrossRef]
Okada K,
Shimura Y
(1990)
Reversible root tip rotation in Arabidopsis seedlings induced by obstacle-touching stimulus.
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Shimura Y
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Aspects of recent developments in mutational studies of plant signalling pathways.
Cell
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369-372
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Rutherford R,
Masson PH
(1996)
Arabidopsis thaliana sku mutant seedlings show exaggerated surface-dependent alteration in root growth vector.
Plant Physiol
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987-998
[Abstract]
Silk WK,
Erickson RO
(1978)
Kinematics of hypocotyl curvature.
Am J Bot
65:
310-319
[CrossRef][ISI]
Simmons C,
Migliaccio F,
Masson P,
Caspar T,
Söll D
(1995a)
A novel root gravitropism mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana exhibiting altered auxin physiology.
Physiol Plant
93:
790-798
[CrossRef][Medline]
Simmons C,
Söll D,
Migliaccio F
(1995b)
Circumnutation and gravitropism cause root waving in Arabidopsis thaliana.
J Exp Bot
46:
143-150
1,
with no significant difference between clockwise and counterclockwise treatments (Table I). Therefore, the directional preference of the
waving was not strong enough to interfere with the wild-type gravitropic response.

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Figure 3.
Kinetics of the gravitropic response of a
representative root of a wild-type seedling growing along the surface
of a vertically oriented agar plate. Different-colored lines represent
segments located at the stated distances from the tip. Arrows show the
range of segments where the initial curvature originates. Inset images
show the root curvature that the data characterize. A, Root
gravistimulated by a counterclockwise rotation of 90°. B, Root
gravistimulated by a clockwise rotation of 90°. Not all segments are
plotted. deg, Degrees.
View this table:
Table I.
Comparative gravitropism kinetics for roots of
wild-type and rgr1 seedlings growing on the surface of vertically
oriented agar plates
Values are ± SD.

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[in a new window]
Figure 4.
Kinetics of the gravitropic response of a
representative root of a rgr1 seedling growing along the
surface of a vertically oriented agar plate. Different-colored lines
represent segments located at the stated distances from the tip. Arrows
show the segments where the initial curvature originates. Inset images
show the root curvature that the data characterize. A, Root
gravistimulated by a counterclockwise rotation of 90°. Arrow shows
the range of segments involved in the initial downward curvature. B,
Root gravistimulated by a clockwise rotation of 90°. Arrow shows the
upward curvature of the more basipetal segments, whereas the
gravitropic response of more apical segments dampens this upward
curvature. deg, Degrees.
), rather than
being a part of the gravitropic response.

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Figure 5.
Kinetics of the gravitropic response of a
representative root of rgr1 growing through a block of
agar. The root was gravistimulated by a clockwise rotation. The
different lines represent segments located at the stated distances from
the tip. deg, Degrees.

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[in a new window]
Figure 6.
Circumnutation patterns for roots growing through
a block of agar. Data for the root-tip segment of a wild-type (A) and a
rgr1 seedling (B) are plotted. deg, Degrees.

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[in a new window]
Figure 7.
Waving growth pattern for roots growing along the
surface of an agar plate. The root-tip angle is plotted for a
representative wild-type (A) and a rgr1 root (B). deg,
Degrees.
1 (mean ± SE; n = 10) and 1.8 ± 0. 7 milliradians
1 (n = 7) for rgr1 and
wild type, respectively, a significant difference from the theoretical
mean (P < 0.05). Therefore, we found chirality to circumnutation,
even in a homogeneous tactile environment.
![]()
DISCUSSION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
), showing that rgr1 roots have a
functional distal elongation zone. The upward curvature in
gravistimulated rgr1 roots occurred in the central
elongation zone, which is consistent with the location of major bending
in waving/coiling growth (Okada and Shimura, 1990
).
). The
frequency of waving remained the same despite differences in growth
rate between roots growing on the surface of agar and those growing in
the agar, or between rgr1 and wild-type roots growing in
agar (J.L. Mullen and E. Turk, unpublished data).
), and Marinelli et al. (1997)
found mutants with inverted
chirality.
1
This work was supported by the National Science
Foundation (grant no. IBN-9416015), the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (grant no. NAG-4522), and the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration/National Science Foundation Joint Program in Plant
Biology, Network for Research of Plant Sensory Systems (grant no.
IBN-9421856).
![]()
FOOTNOTES
*
Corresponding author; e-mail mullen.37{at}osu.edu; fax
1-614-292-6345.
![]()
LITERATURE CITED
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Copyright Clearance Center: 0032-0889/98/118//07
© 1998 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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