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Dive into the research topics where Arezki Boudaoud is active.

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Featured researches published by Arezki Boudaoud.


Science | 2008

Developmental Patterning by Mechanical Signals in Arabidopsis

Olivier Hamant; Marcus G. Heisler; Henrik Jönsson; Pawel Krupinski; Magalie Uyttewaal; Plamen Bokov; Francis Corson; Patrick Sahlin; Arezki Boudaoud; Elliot M. Meyerowitz; Yves Couder; Jan Traas

A central question in developmental biology is whether and how mechanical forces serve as cues for cellular behavior and thereby regulate morphogenesis. We found that morphogenesis at the Arabidopsis shoot apex depends on the microtubule cytoskeleton, which in turn is regulated by mechanical stress. A combination of experiments and modeling shows that a feedback loop encompassing tissue morphology, stress patterns, and microtubule-mediated cellular properties is sufficient to account for the coordinated patterns of microtubule arrays observed in epidermal cells, as well as for patterns of apical morphogenesis.


Cell | 2012

Mechanical stress acts via katanin to amplify differences in growth rate between adjacent cells in Arabidopsis.

Magalie Uyttewaal; Agata Burian; Karen Alim; Benoit Landrein; Dorota Borowska-Wykręt; Annick Dedieu; Alexis Peaucelle; Michał Ludynia; Jan Traas; Arezki Boudaoud; Dorota Kwiatkowska; Olivier Hamant

The presence of diffuse morphogen gradients in tissues supports a view in which growth is locally homogenous. Here we challenge this view: we used a high-resolution quantitative approach to reveal significant growth variability among neighboring cells in the shoot apical meristem, the plant stem cell niche. This variability was strongly decreased in a mutant impaired in the microtubule-severing protein katanin. Major shape defects in the mutant could be related to a local decrease in growth heterogeneity. We show that katanin is required for the cells competence to respond to the mechanical forces generated by growth. This provides the basis for a model in which microtubule dynamics allow the cell to respond efficiently to mechanical forces. This in turn can amplify local growth-rate gradients, yielding more heterogeneous growth and supporting morphogenesis.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2012

The indentation of pressurized elastic shells: from polymeric capsules to yeast cells

Dominic Vella; Amin Ajdari; Ashkan Vaziri; Arezki Boudaoud

Pressurized elastic capsules arise at scales ranging from the 10 m diameter pressure vessels used to store propane at oil refineries to the microscopic polymeric capsules that may be used in drug delivery. Nature also makes extensive use of pressurized elastic capsules: plant cells, bacteria and fungi have stiff walls, which are subject to an internal turgor pressure. Here, we present theoretical, numerical and experimental investigations of the indentation of a linearly elastic shell subject to a constant internal pressure. We show that, unlike unpressurized shells, the relationship between force and displacement demonstrates two linear regimes. We determine analytical expressions for the effective stiffness in each of these regimes in terms of the material properties of the shell and the pressure difference. As a consequence, a single indentation experiment over a range of displacements may be used as a simple assay to determine both the internal pressure and elastic properties of capsules. Our results are relevant for determining the internal pressure in bacterial, fungal or plant cells. As an illustration of this, we apply our results to recent measurements of the stiffness of bakers yeast and infer from these experiments that the internal osmotic pressure of yeast cells may be regulated in response to changes in the osmotic pressure of the external medium.


Nature | 2005

Dynamical phenomena: Walking and orbiting droplets

Yves Couder; Suzie Protière; Emmanuel Fort; Arezki Boudaoud

Small drops can bounce indefinitely on a bath of the same liquid if the container is oscillated vertically at a sufficiently high acceleration. Here we show that bouncing droplets can be made to ‘walk’ at constant horizontal velocity on the liquid surface by increasing this acceleration. This transition yields a new type of localized state with particle–wave duality: surface capillary waves emanate from a bouncing drop, which self-propels by interaction with its own wave and becomes a walker. When two walkers come close, they interact through their waves and this ‘collision’ may cause the two walkers to orbit around each other.


Nature Protocols | 2014

FibrilTool, an ImageJ plug-in to quantify fibrillar structures in raw microscopy images

Arezki Boudaoud; Agata Burian; Dorota Borowska-Wykręt; Magalie Uyttewaal; Roman Wrzalik; Dorota Kwiatkowska; Olivier Hamant

Cell biology heavily relies on the behavior of fibrillar structures, such as the cytoskeleton, yet the analysis of their behavior in tissues often remains qualitative. Image analysis tools have been developed to quantify this behavior, but they often involve an image pre-processing stage that may bias the output and/or they require specific software. Here we describe FibrilTool, an ImageJ plug-in based on the concept of nematic tensor, which can provide a quantitative description of the anisotropy of fiber arrays and their average orientation in cells, directly from raw images obtained by any form of microscopy. FibrilTool has been validated on microtubules, actin and cellulose microfibrils, but it may also help analyze other fibrillar structures, such as collagen, or the texture of various materials. The tool is ImageJ-based, and it is therefore freely accessible to the scientific community and does not require specific computational setup. The tool provides the average orientation and anisotropy of fiber arrays in a given region of interest (ROI) in a few seconds.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

The macroscopic delamination of thin films from elastic substrates

Dominic Vella; José Bico; Arezki Boudaoud; Benoit Roman; Pedro M. Reis

The wrinkling and delamination of stiff thin films adhered to a polymer substrate have important applications in “flexible electronics.” The resulting periodic structures, when used for circuitry, have remarkable mechanical properties because stretching or twisting of the substrate is mostly accommodated through bending of the film, which minimizes fatigue or fracture. To date, applications in this context have used substrate patterning to create an anisotropic substrate-film adhesion energy, thereby producing a controlled array of delamination “blisters.” However, even in the absence of such patterning, blisters appear spontaneously, with a characteristic size. Here, we perform well-controlled experiments at macroscopic scales to study what sets the dimensions of these blisters in terms of the material properties and explain our results by using a combination of scaling and analytical methods. Besides pointing to a method for determining the interfacial toughness, our analysis suggests a number of design guidelines for the thin films used in flexible electronic applications. Crucially, we show that, to avoid the possibility that delamination may cause fatigue damage, the thin film thickness must be greater than a critical value, which we determine.


Nature | 2014

Cytokinin signalling inhibitory fields provide robustness to phyllotaxis

Fabrice Besnard; Yassin Refahi; Valérie Morin; Benjamin Marteaux; Géraldine Brunoud; Pierre Chambrier; Frédérique Rozier; Vincent Mirabet; Jonathan Legrand; Stéphanie Lainé; Emmanuel Thévenon; Etienne Farcot; Coralie Cellier; Pradeep Das; Anthony Bishopp; Renaud Dumas; François Parcy; Ykä Helariutta; Arezki Boudaoud; Christophe Godin; Jan Traas; Yann Guédon; Teva Vernoux

How biological systems generate reproducible patterns with high precision is a central question in science. The shoot apical meristem (SAM), a specialized tissue producing plant aerial organs, is a developmental system of choice to address this question. Organs are periodically initiated at the SAM at specific spatial positions and this spatiotemporal pattern defines phyllotaxis. Accumulation of the plant hormone auxin triggers organ initiation, whereas auxin depletion around organs generates inhibitory fields that are thought to be sufficient to maintain these patterns and their dynamics. Here we show that another type of hormone-based inhibitory fields, generated directly downstream of auxin by intercellular movement of the cytokinin signalling inhibitor ARABIDOPSIS HISTIDINE PHOSPHOTRANSFER PROTEIN 6 (AHP6), is involved in regulating phyllotactic patterns. We demonstrate that AHP6-based fields establish patterns of cytokinin signalling in the meristem that contribute to the robustness of phyllotaxis by imposing a temporal sequence on organ initiation. Our findings indicate that not one but two distinct hormone-based fields may be required for achieving temporal precision during formation of reiterative structures at the SAM, thus indicating an original mechanism for providing robustness to a dynamic developmental system.


Plant Journal | 2011

In vivo analysis of local wall stiffness at the shoot apical meristem in Arabidopsis using atomic force microscopy.

Pascale Milani; Maryam Gholamirad; Jan Traas; Alain Arneodo; Arezki Boudaoud; Françoise Argoul; Olivier Hamant

Whereas the morphogenesis of developing organisms is relatively well understood at the molecular level, the contribution of the mechanical properties of the cells to shape changes remains largely unknown, mainly because of the lack of quantified biophysical parameters at cellular or subcellular resolution. Here we designed an atomic force microscopy approach to investigate the elastic modulus of the outer cell wall in living shoot apical meristems (SAMs). SAMs are highly organized structures that contain the plant stem cells, and generate all of the aerial organs of the plant. Building on modeling and experimental data, we designed a protocol that is able to measure very local properties, i.e. within 40-100 nm deep into the wall of living meristematic cells. We identified three levels of complexity at the meristem surface, with significant heterogeneity in stiffness at regional, cellular and even subcellular levels. Strikingly, we found that the outer cell wall was much stiffer at the tip of the meristem (5 ± 2 MPa on average), covering the stem cell pool, than on the flanks of the meristem (1.5 ± 0.7 MPa on average). Altogether, these results demonstrate the existence of a multiscale spatialization of the mechanical properties of the meristem surface, in addition to the previously established molecular and cytological zonation of the SAM, correlating with regional growth rate distribution.


eLife | 2014

Subcellular and supracellular mechanical stress prescribes cytoskeleton behavior in Arabidopsis cotyledon pavement cells

Arun Sampathkumar; Pawel Krupinski; Raymond Wightman; Pascale Milani; Alexandre Berquand; Arezki Boudaoud; Olivier Hamant; Henrik Jönsson; Elliot M. Meyerowitz

Although it is a central question in biology, how cell shape controls intracellular dynamics largely remains an open question. Here, we show that the shape of Arabidopsis pavement cells creates a stress pattern that controls microtubule orientation, which then guides cell wall reinforcement. Live-imaging, combined with modeling of cell mechanics, shows that microtubules align along the maximal tensile stress direction within the cells, and atomic force microscopy demonstrates that this leads to reinforcement of the cell wall parallel to the microtubules. This feedback loop is regulated: cell-shape derived stresses could be overridden by imposed tissue level stresses, showing how competition between subcellular and supracellular cues control microtubule behavior. Furthermore, at the microtubule level, we identified an amplification mechanism in which mechanical stress promotes the microtubule response to stress by increasing severing activity. These multiscale feedbacks likely contribute to the robustness of microtubule behavior in plant epidermis. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01967.001


The Plant Cell | 2011

Evolution and Diverse Roles of the CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON Genes in Arabidopsis Leaf Development

Alice Hasson; Anne Plessis; Thomas Blein; Bernard Adroher; Stephen P. Grigg; Miltos Tsiantis; Arezki Boudaoud; Catherine Damerval; Patrick Laufs

This work reveals the functional divergence of the three CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON genes during Arabidopsis leaf development. In particular, it shows that the functions and expression patterns of CUC1 and CUC2 diverged since the formation of these genes by the duplication of a common ancestor within the Brassicale lineage. CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON2 (CUC2) and the interacting microRNA miR164 regulate leaf margin dissection. Here, we further investigate the evolution and the specific roles of the CUC1 to CUC3 genes during Arabidopsis thaliana leaf serration. We show that CUC2 is essential for dissecting the leaves of a wide range of lobed/serrated Arabidopsis lines. Inactivation of CUC3 leads to a partial suppression of the serrations, indicating a role for this gene in leaf shaping. Morphometric analysis of leaf development and genetic analysis provide evidence for different temporal contributions of CUC2 and CUC3. Chimeric constructs mixing CUC regulatory sequences with different coding sequences reveal both redundant and specific roles for the three CUC genes that could be traced back to changes in their expression pattern or protein activity. In particular, we show that CUC1 triggers the formation of leaflets when ectopically expressed instead of CUC2 in the developing leaves. These divergent fates of the CUC1 and CUC2 genes after their formation by the duplication of a common ancestor is consistent with the signature of positive selection detected on the ancestral branch to CUC1. Combining experimental observations with the retraced origin of the CUC genes in the Brassicales, we propose an evolutionary scenario for the CUC genes.

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Olivier Hamant

Claude Bernard University Lyon 1

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Vincent Mirabet

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Jan Traas

Claude Bernard University Lyon 1

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Basile Audoly

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pradeep Das

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Francis Corson

École Normale Supérieure

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Pascale Milani

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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