The ability to self-repair damaged tissue is
one of the key features that define living organisms. Plants in
particular are regeneration champions, a quality that has been used for
centuries in horticultural techniques such as grafting. Belgian
scientists from VIB and Ghent University have now discovered a key
protein complex that controls plant tissue repair. Understanding this
mechanism is of great agricultural importance: crops and edible plants
might be cultivated more efficiently and made more resistant to
parasitic plants. The results are published in the leading journal Nature Plants.
In humans and animals, missing or damaged tissue can be replenished
by stem cells. These basic, undifferentiated cells can change into more
specific cell types and divide to produce new cells that replace the
damaged tissue cells. Plants are characterized by a similar system, but
their regenerative properties are generally much greater. While this
asset has been widely used in grafting and plant tissue culture
techniques, the mechanism by which cells are triggered to form new cells
after injury remained largely elusive.Agricultural breakthrough
A team led by professor Lieven De Veylder (VIB-Ghent University) uncovered a novel protein complex controlling tissue repair in plants. One dead plant cell is sufficient to send a signal to the surrounding cells, which activates the protein complex. As a result, these neighboring cells are triggered to divide in such a way that the newly produced cells can replace the dead ones.Prof. De Veylder (VIB-Ghent University) said "There are also a lot of plants and crops that don't have such swift repair systems, such as rice, wheat, corn, bananas and onions. By fully understanding this regeneration system, we might be able to induce it in those kinds of plants, thereby increasing cultivation efficiency. The same goes for grafting, which is employed in the wine and fruit industries, among others. Our findings may help to drastically reduce graft failure rate."
Harvesting the fruits of evolution
A new ecological strategy to counter parasitic plants is another potential future application of the study's results. These organisms, accounting for approximately 1% of flowering plants, are actually grafts that are able to grow through the mechanism described by the research project. In time, scientists may be able to block the natural grafting of these parasites onto economically important crops.Prof. De Veylder (VIB-Ghent University) said "Our findings illustrate how science can capitalize on the mechanisms of evolution. After all, nature has gradually developed solutions to nearly every biological problem. As scientists, it is our duty to get to the bottom of how these processes function and apply them to the benefit of society. As follow-up steps, we will check whether our results can be extrapolated to crops such as corn, and try to figure out the signals that activate the protein complex. By FLANDERS INTERUNIVERSITY INSTITUTE FOR BIO TECHNOLOGY
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