Intrinsic regulation of cambial growth

Authors
Citation
Ra. Savidge, Intrinsic regulation of cambial growth, J PL GR REG, 20(1), 2001, pp. 52-77
Citations number
172
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences","Animal & Plant Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
ISSN journal
07217595 → ACNP
Volume
20
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
52 - 77
Database
ISI
SICI code
0721-7595(200103)20:1<52:IROCG>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Secondary growth in trees is an attractive system for explaining, through c oncerted research into mRNA, proteomics, and cell biology, how eukaryotic c ellular differentiation is regulated. Differentiation pursuits by genetical ly uniform cambial derivatives are diverse, less than perfectly repetitive in time and space, and readily modified experimentally. Within each zone of both xylo- and phloiogenesis, competence for at least pluripotent, and not uncommonly totipotent, development evidently is retained. Thus, hypothetic al concepts of cellular differentiation 'programs' and 'determined histogen esis' lack support beyond formation and continuing perpetuation of cambium as template for production of similarly shaped and sized daughter cells. Th e several distinct developmental zones of wood formation manifest metabolic plateaus, and their transitional regions indicate where equilibrium become s overbalanced and cascades to the next step, changing cells biochemically, hence anatomically, into differentiated states. It remains unclear if diff erential gene expression during wood formation is strictly of a quantitativ e nature or if it also varies qualitatively. In addition to selective trans cription, another plausible regulatory mechanism is quantitatively varying but still totipotent expression of so-called 'housekeeping' genes modulated through spatial information and changing environments, for example, at lev els of mRNA supply and stability. The environment of fusiform and ray cells of the cambial region comprises, in addition to dynamic maintenance metabo lism, fluxes in phytohormones, carbohydrates, water, O-2, root nutriment, a nd physical factors capable of influencing both gene expression and enzyme kinetics. In addition to phloem and xylem transport, intercellular communic ation is normal to cambium and its differentiating derivatives; thus, the p rocambium-cambium continuum appears to be a living 'fibre' communication ne twork plausibly serving to integrate growth and development throughout the whole plant.