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A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 October 2022

Daniel H. Chitwood*
Affiliation:
Department of Horticulture, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48823, USA Department of Computational Mathematics, Science and Engineering, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48823, USA
Joey Mullins
Affiliation:
Department of Horticulture, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48823, USA
*
Author for correspondence: Daniel H. Chitwood, E-mail: chitwoo9@msu.edu

Abstract

Using conventional statistical approaches there exist powerful methods to classify shapes. Embedded in morphospaces is information that allows us to visualise theoretical leaves. These unmeasured leaves are never considered nor how the negative morphospace can inform us about the forces responsible for shaping leaf morphology. Here, we model leaf shape using an allometric indicator of leaf size, the ratio of vein to blade areas. The borders of the observable morphospace are restricted by constraints and define an orthogonal grid of developmental and evolutionary effects which can predict the shapes of possible grapevine leaves. Leaves in the genus Vitis are found to fully occupy morphospace available to them. From this morphospace, we predict the developmental and evolutionary shapes of grapevine leaves that are not only possible, but exist, and argue that rather than explaining leaf shape in terms of discrete nodes or species, that a continuous model is more appropriate.

Information

Type
Original Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is included and the original work is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with The John Innes Centre
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Grapevine leaf morphology. (a) Counting from the shoot tip, Vitis cinerea leaves from node positions 1 (left) and 5 (right), each with a respective scale bar, are expanded in detail from the same leaves shown in the panel below. The 21 landmarks used in this study are indicated, as well as ampelographic nomenclature naming morphological features. Note that in the younger leaf that vasculature takes up relatively more area than in the mature leaf. (b) For seven different grapevine species analysed in this study, leaves from the shoot tip to the shoot base are shown with scale bar. Leaf area increases from the shoot tip to the middle of the shoot due to leaf expansion, whereas increases in leaf size from the shoot base to the middle of the shoot in mature leaves are due to heteroblasty.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Modelling $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ and $\ln \left(\mathrm{leaf}\kern0.17em \mathrm{area}\right)$ as a function of normalised node position. (a) The natural log of the ratio of vein-to-blade area, $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$, and (b) the natural log of leaf area, $\ln \left(\mathrm{leaf}\kern0.17em \mathrm{area}\right)$, are modelled as second-degree polynomials of normalised node position (where 0 is the shoot tip and 1 is the shoot base). The normalised node position values corresponding to the minimum $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ and maximum $\ln \left(\mathrm{leaf}\kern0.17em \mathrm{area}\right)$ values are indicated by a magenta vertical line and the inverse of the golden ratio is indicated by a gold vertical line. (c) In order to model developmental changes due to leaf expansion separate from heteroblastic effects, leaves from the shoot tip to the normalised node position value corresponding to the $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ minimum were isolated and modelled as a reciprocal function of normalised node position. Extrapolated values are shown in dashed line and function asymptotes in purple. (d) A linear model of $\ln \left(\mathrm{leaf}\kern0.17em \mathrm{area}\right)$ as a function of $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Developmental models of leaf shape. Fitting each coordinate value of 21 landmarks as a second-degree polynomial of $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$, continuous models of expanding leaves for the seven species shown were created. Inclusive of the maximum and minimum $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ values for each species, corresponding to young and mature leaves, respectively, leaves corresponding to ten equally spaced time points were reconstructed. Estimated leaf areas were estimated from $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ values and 1 cm scale bars for each leaf are shown. Leaf areas are indicated by colour.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Morphospace. A morphospace was calculated from a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of all leaves from the New York germplasm (black) and California populations (white). (a) $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ values and (b) distal lobing values were calculated from reconstructed leaves throughout the morphospace using its inverse transform and coloured by magma and virdis colour schemes, respectively, as indicated. To orient and contextualise the space, developmental models for seven grapevine species were projected into the space, as indicated by coloured lines. Isolines for (a) $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ values (solid lines) and (b) distal lobing values (dashed lines) are shown and their values are provided in the respective plots.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Theoretical leaves. 100 theoretical leaves reconstructed from the intersection of 10, equally spaced $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ and distal lobing isolines, corresponding to orthogonal developmental and evolutionary changes, respectively, across grapevine leaf morphospace. $\ln \left(\mathrm{vein}\kern0.17em \mathrm{to}\kern0.17em \mathrm{blade}\kern0.17em \mathrm{ratio}\right)$ and distal lobing values are shown and leaf areas are indicated by colour.

Author comment: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Editors of Quantitative Plant Biology,

Please find submitted the manuscript "The grapevine leaves that are (or were) not: constraints on leaf development and choosing to see what seemingly is not", by Chitwood and Mullins.

We were contacted by Preprint Editor Dr. Enrico Scarpella and encouraged to submit to Quantitative Plant Biology based on our bioRxiv submission of this manuscript.

In this manuscript, we build on previous morphometric work measuring the shapes of grapevine leaves and ask instead of "what exists?", "what does not exist?". Using an allometric indicator of leaf size and shape, the ratio of vein to blade area, we model leaf development across Vitis species. We then reconstruct theoretical leaves at the border of observable morphospace. Using the assumption that self-intersecting polygonal regions are theoretically impossible, we then reconstruct leaves that are possible but not present in the morphospace. We find that grapevine leaf morphospace is strongly bounded by developmental constraint, and speculate on leaves that are possible but not present. We end with a discussion of how we choose not to observe what seemingly does not exist and the ramifications of this perspective to survivorship bias in the sciences.

We have recommended Dr. Naomi Nakayama (Imperial College) and Dr. Adrienne Roeder (Cornell) as reviewers based on their strong modeling backgrounds and expertise in quantiative plant development and morphology. We also recommend Dr. Luis Díaz (Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales, Agrícolas y Pecuarias (INIFAP), Aguascalientes) and Dr. Julie. Kang (University of Northern Iowa) because of their expertise in morphometrics and grapevine leaf shape specifically.

Thank you for your time and consideration. Please be in touch if you require any further information.

On behalf of the authors,

Dan Chitwood

Review: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: This manuscript reanalyzed a dataset of several thousands of leaf shapes from different Vitis species, and identified the subjacent features of leaf shape that demarcate the limits of possible and impossible leaves. The objectives of the study are clear and make sense. The methods are appropriate. I’m really glad the authors provide the data and a well-annotated script to validate the results. This is both useful for further studies and to facilitate the reviewing process. I ran some of the analyses on my own, and found a major problem with the main result in the study (my PCA results are different from what is presented in the manuscript). Please see below my comments:

1) Leaves with (some) edges crossing each other are not possible, and this is used by the authors to demarcate what’s possible in terms of leaf shapes. Adding a very small explanation of what is “self-intersecting polygonal regions” early in the manuscript (maybe in line 74; add a small sentence between parenthesis) might help the reader why this is important.

2) The relative shoot position (heteroblasty) to the minimum ln(vein-to-blade ratio) is very close to the inverse of the golden ratio… This is intriguing! Only leaves >1cm (“measurable leaves”) are included in this study. By considering ALL leaves, the relative position would be shifted to right (see Figure 1), which might decrease the polynomial minimum value a little bit… that would be an even closer value to the golden ratio, is not? Anyway, I think that’s interesting, but at the same time, hard to assess.

3) I’m having a hard time trying to understand the biological consequences/implications of ln(vein-to-blade ratio) changing directions in the middle of the shoot (~0.63)… The authors gave a description of these results in lines 158-161. Expanding these ideas would be nice.

4) In the Jupyther notebook, the authors mentioned that only leaves <= than 0.6379505834434538 (polynomial minimum value when regressing ln(vein-to-blade ratio) in heteroblasty) were further analyzed. Why? Also, this is not mentioned in the manuscript.

5) I ran the PCA analysis as indicated in the Jupyther notebook, and the explained variances I’m getting are completely different to what is shown by the authors (PC1 ~90.2%; PC2 ~9.6%). I got that PC1 and PC2 explain ~35 and 21% of the variance in the data, respectively. Am I missing something?

6) My results (PC1 and PC2 explaining ~66% instead of ~99%) change the narrative of the further analysis. Please see the attached file to visualized the figure. The relationship between log(vein-to-blade ratio) and PC1 persists (panel A). However, panels B-D are quite different compared with what the authors presented. And, considering that the morphospace in panel D is the base of further analysis (for example, defining the limits of what is possible and what is not in terms of leaf shapes), it is hard to assess the accuracy of the results. I’ll be happy to further discuss what could be wrong with PCA results… Did I miss something? Or, did the authors miss something? Until then, discussing the trends and particular observations in the paper is not worth it because these might change… However, I do agree with the novelty of the concept presented in this paper and the different methodologies/analyses carried out to derive the conclusions.

7) I would suggest removing the last part of the discussion section (survivorship bias, etc…), which in my opinion, goes beyond the scope of this work. An opinion piece boarding these topics might be a better venue.

8) Some other minor comments:

i) 21 -> Twenty one, line 99

ii) Line 91. 13 Vitis vines with unassigned identity. A portion of these accessions were unambiguously assigned to a species/group based on genetic data, is not?

iii) Line 117. Gauss’ are formula -> Gauss’ area formula.

Review: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R0/PR3

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: This article describes the morphospace of the developing leaves of grapevine species, based on the quantification of the vein to blade ratio of thousands of real leaves. The authors then identify theoretical shapes that are beyond the limits of the observable morphospace. Some of these shapes cannot exist, either because they miss particular regions in the leaf or because subregions of these theoretical shapes would intersect. Other shapes, however, are possible but not observed or not yet observed.

I do not have any major remarks on the work as such. However, some of the more intuitive descriptions of the leaf shapes are not straightforward and it might be useful for the reader to give some examples of the different observed shapes in the form of leaf scans (e.g. including those at the limits of the observed morphospace).

I was also somewhat puzzled by the implications of this analysis as discussed by the authors. One of main points seems to be that one should not a priori reject as non-existing what has not been observed. This is indeed an important point, but it is in a certain sense also self-evident. Identifying what has not been observed but that could be is obviously a first necessary step. The authors also suggest that the main reason for the existence of non-observed shapes is that they haven't looked at sufficient grapevine varieties. Thus, the non-observed croissant-like leaf halves could very well be found in varieties with overlapping petiolar sinuses (line 303 and further). Since they seem to have obvious candidates for the non-observed shapes in the morphospace, it is somewhat disappointing that they haven't checked this and ideally they should. If, however, certain shapes are really possible but non-existent it would have been interesting, to have an impression of what the more specific implications for leaf development would be (for example what developmental constraints could explain the missing shapes?).

Recommendation: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R0/PR4

Comments

Comments to Author: Dear Dr. Chitwood,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript to Quantitative Plant Biology. I read with great interest your work and the reviewers' comments, and I agree with the reviewers that the identification of the morphospace boundaries between possible and impossible leaves has the potential to greatly advance our understanding of leaf morphogenesis. However, I also agree with the reviewers that to fulfill that potential the manuscript needs to be revised. In particular, Reviewer 1 was apparently unable to replicate the main result in your study, and Reviewer 2 had suggestions on how to broaden the readership and increase the impact of the study. I would therefore like to ask you to submit a revised manuscript that addresses the reviewers' comments. Furthermore, in addition to the revised manuscript, please upload:

(1) A point-by-point response to the reviewers' comments; please respond to all comments: if you disagree with some of them, please explain why that is so, instead of ignoring them.

(2) A version of your manuscript in which the changes made are clearly visible (e.g., a PDF of a DOC(X) file in which the changes made had been tracked with the "Track Changes" option).

I look forward to receiving your revised manuscript soon.

Sincerely yours,

Dr. Enrico Scarpella

Associate Editor

Quantitative Plant Biology

Decision: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R1/PR6

Comments

Thank you for considering and reviewing the manuscript! The reviews were extremely helpful, and we thank the reviewers (especially reviewer # 1, who took the time to reproduce results) who substantially improved the manuscript and its conclusions.

Review: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R1/PR7

Comments

Comments to Author: The authors have significantly improved the manuscript, particularly with the addition of the CA populations. The main conclusion (development and evolution are the major constraints of the leaf morphospace) is well supported by the analysis conducted by the authors. Providing the codes is extremely important, both for reproducibility and education; thank you!

Just a small comment and a suggestion:

-I was kind of expecting to see the projected models for each NY species (colored lines in Figure 4) to be more scattered (but maintaining their angle, or parallel to the “development” axis) through the distal lobing isolines (instead of lying on top of each other). In other words, considering the shape differences across the NY species, I would expect a continuum of projected models from the region they are now to the A. glandulosa projection, which is the extreme case. Could the authors comment a little bit on this?

In the previous version of the manuscript, the authors provided images of theoretical leaves demarking the morphospace in a PCA plot. I think Figure 4 is a good opportunity to do the same, and it would be a good complement to the variables plotted as colored maps on both figure panels (ln(vein-to-blade) and distal lobing values). Maybe just little leaf figures colored in black located at strategic points in the external isolines? It is just a suggestion.

-In lines 124-135, where the authors describe the CA populations, I suggest moving the sentence in lines 124-128 to after the description of population 5 (line 135). Something like: “The populations were created to examine variation in leaf lobing. The vines were composed of 125 individuals from a DVIT 2876 x unnamed V. vinifera selection cross (Pop1), 100 individuals from a DVIT 2876 x a different unnamed V. vinifera selection cross (Pop2), 150 individuals from a DVIT 2876 x unnamed Vitis hybrid cross (Pop3), 75 individuals from a DVIT 2876 x a different unnamed Vitis hybrid cross (Pop4), and 50 individuals from a seedling (DVIT 2876 x unnamed V. vinifera selection) x DVIT 3374 (V. mustangensis Buckley) cross (Pop5). 500 seedlings were planted in the vineyard. 450 seedlings shared a seed parent, DVIT 2876. The remaining 50 seedlings had DVIT 2876 as a grandparent. DVIT 2876 ‘Olmo b55-19’ is a compound-leafed accession from the USDA-ARS National Clonal Germplasm repository, suspected to include V. piasezkii Maximowicz, as one of its parents (or grandparents).”

Also, I think that numbers have to be written as words (instead of actual numbers) when used at the beginning of a sentence.

Review: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R1/PR8

Comments

Comments to Author: This is an extensively revised version of a previously submitted manuscript. The authors have added new data and corrected a critical mistake in the original PCA analysis identified by reviewer 1. With the addition of new data (coming from California populaitions) it is now shown that the grapevine leaves completely fill the morphospace available to them. The addition of a figure showing leaf shapes including scans of real leaves is very helpful. The two remarks I had, are therefore fully addressed.

Recommendation: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R1/PR9

Comments

Comments to Author: Dear Dr. Chitwood,

Thank you for submitting your revised manuscript to Quantitative Plant Biology. I read with great interest the revised manuscript and the reviewers' comments, and I agree with the reviewers that the revised manuscript is hugely improved.

Whereas Reviewer 2 was completely satisfied with how you addressed their concerns, Reviewer 1 had very few, very minor suggestions for improvement. I would therefore like to ask you to submit a revised manuscript that addresses the very few remaining comments by Reviewer 1. In addition to the revised manuscript, please upload:

(1) A point-by-point response to Reviewer 1's comments; please respond to all the comments: if you disagree with some of them, please explain why that is so, instead of ignoring them.

(2) A version of your manuscript in which the changes made are clearly visible (e.g., a PDF of a DOC(X) file in which the changes made had been tracked with the "Track Changes" option).

I look forward to receiving your revised manuscript soon.

Sincerely yours,

Dr. Enrico Scarpella

Associate Editor

Quantitative Plant Biology

Decision: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R1/PR10

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R2/PR11

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Recommendation: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R2/PR12

Comments

Comments to Author: Dear Dr. Chitwood,

Thank you for so rapidly submitting a revised version of your manuscript. After reading it and your response to the reviewers' comments, I am delighted to accept it in its present form. Congratulations!

Sincerely yours,

Dr. Enrico Scarpella

Associate Editor

Quantitative Plant Biology

Decision: A predicted developmental and evolutionary morphospace for grapevine leaves — R2/PR13

Comments

No accompanying comment.