4.7 Review

Callus, Dedifferentiation, Totipotency, Somatic Embryogenesis: What These Terms Mean in the Era of Molecular Plant Biology?

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00536

Keywords

callus; dedifferentiation; plant regeneration; plant cell and tissue culture; somatic embryogenesis; terminology; totipotency

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Funding

  1. National Research, Development, and Innovation Office (Nemzeti Kutatasi, Fejlesztesi es Innovacios Hivatal) [K108802]

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Recent findings call for the critical overview of some incorrectly used plant cell and tissue culture terminology such as dedifferentiation, callus, totipotency, and somatic embryogenesis. Plant cell and tissue culture methods are efficient means to preserve and propagate genotypes with superior germplasm as well as to increase genetic variability for breading. Besides, they are useful research tools and objects of plant developmental biology. The history of plant cell and tissue culture dates back to more than a century. Its basic methodology and terminology were formulated preceding modern plant biology. Recent progress in molecular and cell biology techniques allowed unprecedented insights into the underlying processes of plant cell/tissue culture and regeneration. The main aim of this review is to provide a theoretical framework supported by recent experimental findings to reconsider certain historical, even dogmatic, statements widely used by plant scientists and teachers such as plant cells are totipotent or callus is a mass of dedifferentiated cells, or somatic embryos have a single cell origin. These statements are based on a confused terminology. Clarification of it might help to avoid further misunderstanding and to overcome potential terminology-raised barriers in plant research.

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