Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Development in the vascular plants
- 2 Embryogenesis: beginnings of development
- 3 Analytical and experimental studies of embryo development
- 4 The structure of the shoot apex
- 5 Analytical studies of the shoot apex
- 6 Experimental investigations on the shoot apex
- 7 Organogenesis in the shoot: leaf origin and position
- 8 Organogenesis in the shoot: determination of leaves and branches
- 9 Organogenesis in the shoot: later stages of leaf development
- 10 Determinate shoots: thorns and flowers
- 11 The development of the shoot system
- 12 The root
- 13 Differentiation of the plant body: the origin of pattern
- 14 Differentiation of the plant body: the elaboration of pattern
- 15 Secondary growth: the vascular cambium
- 16 Secondary growth: experimental studies on the cambium
- 17 Alternative patterns of development
- Credits
- Author index
- Subject index
13 - Differentiation of the plant body: the origin of pattern
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Development in the vascular plants
- 2 Embryogenesis: beginnings of development
- 3 Analytical and experimental studies of embryo development
- 4 The structure of the shoot apex
- 5 Analytical studies of the shoot apex
- 6 Experimental investigations on the shoot apex
- 7 Organogenesis in the shoot: leaf origin and position
- 8 Organogenesis in the shoot: determination of leaves and branches
- 9 Organogenesis in the shoot: later stages of leaf development
- 10 Determinate shoots: thorns and flowers
- 11 The development of the shoot system
- 12 The root
- 13 Differentiation of the plant body: the origin of pattern
- 14 Differentiation of the plant body: the elaboration of pattern
- 15 Secondary growth: the vascular cambium
- 16 Secondary growth: experimental studies on the cambium
- 17 Alternative patterns of development
- Credits
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
The continued growth of the plant body depends upon the production of new cells by mitotic activity in its meristematic regions. One might predict that this would result in a homogeneous cell population, because mitosis ordinarily leads to the formation of identical sister cells. It is obvious, however, that the plant body does not consist of such a uniform assemblage of cells. Rather, it is composed of diverse specialized cells arranged in patterns having functional significance. If this were not the case, the plant could function, at best, in only a very restricted manner. The phenomenon of differentiation, as this production of diverse cell types in definite patterns is called, has been alluded to in earlier chapters because it is almost impossible to consider growth apart from it. Now it is necessary to turn attention specifically to the phenomenon itself, one of the major topics of interest in modern developmental biology.
GENETIC CORRELATES OF DIFFERENTIATION
The diversity of differentiated cell types might suggest that genetic changes must be involved in differentiation. The preponderance of evidence, however, indicates that cellular diversity within the organism is accomplished in a framework of genetic homogeneity. The most striking evidence in support of this principle is to be found in the well-known regeneration phenomena characteristic of plants, which will be discussed fully in Chapter 17. Roots, shoots, and in many cases whole plants are often regenerated from fully differentiated cells either as a normal process or as a result of wounding or some other stimulus.
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- Patterns in Plant Development , pp. 255 - 284Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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