4.7 Review

Cell-to-Cell Connection in Plant Grafting-Molecular Insights into Symplasmic Reconstruction

期刊

PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY
卷 62, 期 9, 页码 1362-1371

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/pcp/pcab109

关键词

Cell-to-cell connection; Grafting; Plasmodesmata; Symplasm; Symplasmic transport; Transcriptome

资金

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [18H03950, 21H00368, 20H03273]
  2. Project of the NARO Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution (Research Program on Development of Innovative Technology) [28001AB]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21H00368, 20H03273, 18H03950] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Grafting involves connecting tissues from two individual plants to grow a single chimeric plant and has been studied at the molecular level to understand processes such as wound response, cell division, cell-cell adhesion, cell differentiation, and vascular formation. It is also used to investigate systemic signaling and transport in plants. Focus has been on the mechanism of vascular development and the importance of symplasmic connections via plasmodesmata in sharing cellular information during tissue differentiation. Future research directions include exploring plasmodesmata formation and upregulated genes associated with symplasm establishment.
Grafting is a means to connect tissues from two individual plants and grow a single chimeric plant through the establishment of both apoplasmic and symplasmic connections. Recent molecular studies using RNA-sequencing data have provided genetic information on the processes involved in tissue reunion, including wound response, cell division, cell-cell adhesion, cell differentiation and vascular formation. Thus, studies on grafting increase our understanding of various aspects of plant biology. Grafting has also been used to study systemic signaling and transport of micromolecules and macromolecules in the plant body. Given that graft viability and molecular transport across graft junctions largely depend on vascular formation, a major focus in grafting biology has been the mechanism of vascular development. In addition, it has been thought that symplasmic connections via plasmodesmata are fundamentally important to share cellular information among newly proliferated cells at the graft interface and to accomplish tissue differentiation correctly. Therefore, this review focuses on plasmodesmata formation during grafting. We take advantage of interfamily grafts for unambiguous identification of the graft interface and summarize morphological aspects of de novo formation of plasmodesmata. Important molecular events are addressed by re-examining the time-course transcriptome of interfamily grafts, from which we recently identified the cell-cell adhesion mechanism. Plasmodesmata-associated genes upregulated during graft healing that may provide a link to symplasm establishment are described. We also discuss future research directions.

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