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Cell-context signalling

Pennell, Roger I. ; Cronk, Quentin C. B. ; Forsberg, L. Scott ; Stöhr, Christine ; Snogerup, Lars ; Kjellbom, Per LU and McCabe, Paul F. (1995) In Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 350(1331). p.87-93
Abstract
In plants, cells differentiate according to their position with relation to their cell neighbours. Monoclonal antibody (MAb) probes to polysaccharide epitopes, present at the surfaces of all plant cells, have defined a family of proteoglycan antigens which signify cellular position. These MAbs have been used to sort the single cells present in carrot somatic cell cultures on the basis of the presence or absence of specific polysaccharide epitopes. This sorting allows embryo initial cells to be cultured among different cell collectives (based on their polysaccharide epitope expression) and thus in altered contextual backgrounds. These experiments have shown that specific populations of embryo initial precursor cells induce and sustain the... (More)
In plants, cells differentiate according to their position with relation to their cell neighbours. Monoclonal antibody (MAb) probes to polysaccharide epitopes, present at the surfaces of all plant cells, have defined a family of proteoglycan antigens which signify cellular position. These MAbs have been used to sort the single cells present in carrot somatic cell cultures on the basis of the presence or absence of specific polysaccharide epitopes. This sorting allows embryo initial cells to be cultured among different cell collectives (based on their polysaccharide epitope expression) and thus in altered contextual backgrounds. These experiments have shown that specific populations of embryo initial precursor cells induce and sustain the early development of the embryo initials, revealing that the populations of different cell collectives which are defined by different polysaccharide epitopes (cell-context) serves important regulatory function in early plant development. Somatic embryo initials deprived of the influence of the cell collective — defined by the presence of the polysaccharide epitope recognised by the MAb JIM8 — establish unorganised first divisions and develop as callus. However, in the presence of the JIM8-reactive cell collective, or medium conditioned by the collective, the initials develop into somatic embryos. This demonstrates that the cells defined by the JIM8 polysaccharide epitope are necessary to sustain the meristematic activity which drives the renewed development. Transfer of a cell-wall signal from the JIM8- reactive cells to cellular situations in carrot seedlings in which they would not normally occur (out-of-context signals) stimulates lateral root production, thus demonstrating that the inductive signal operative in suspension cultures can be reinterpreted by specific cells later in development and reinitiate meristematic activity. The communication between the precursor cells defined by JIM8 and embryo initials defines an early cell-cell interaction in developing carrot plants. Labelling of flower sections suggests that the same interaction exists between embryo apical and basal cells early in normal development. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
volume
350
issue
1331
pages
7 pages
publisher
Royal Society Publishing
external identifiers
  • scopus:0029654836
ISSN
1471-2970
DOI
10.1098/rstb.1995.0142
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9b2a9802-99da-4726-9d5c-eeeaed697742
date added to LUP
2019-06-20 17:05:21
date last changed
2021-01-03 11:15:19
@article{9b2a9802-99da-4726-9d5c-eeeaed697742,
  abstract     = {{In plants, cells differentiate according to their position with relation to their cell neighbours. Monoclonal antibody (MAb) probes to polysaccharide epitopes, present at the surfaces of all plant cells, have defined a family of proteoglycan antigens which signify cellular position. These MAbs have been used to sort the single cells present in carrot somatic cell cultures on the basis of the presence or absence of specific polysaccharide epitopes. This sorting allows embryo initial cells to be cultured among different cell collectives (based on their polysaccharide epitope expression) and thus in altered contextual backgrounds. These experiments have shown that specific populations of embryo initial precursor cells induce and sustain the early development of the embryo initials, revealing that the populations of different cell collectives which are defined by different polysaccharide epitopes (cell-context) serves important regulatory function in early plant development. Somatic embryo initials deprived of the influence of the cell collective — defined by the presence of the polysaccharide epitope recognised by the MAb JIM8 — establish unorganised first divisions and develop as callus. However, in the presence of the JIM8-reactive cell collective, or medium conditioned by the collective, the initials develop into somatic embryos. This demonstrates that the cells defined by the JIM8 polysaccharide epitope are necessary to sustain the meristematic activity which drives the renewed development. Transfer of a cell-wall signal from the JIM8- reactive cells to cellular situations in carrot seedlings in which they would not normally occur (out-of-context signals) stimulates lateral root production, thus demonstrating that the inductive signal operative in suspension cultures can be reinterpreted by specific cells later in development and reinitiate meristematic activity. The communication between the precursor cells defined by JIM8 and embryo initials defines an early cell-cell interaction in developing carrot plants. Labelling of flower sections suggests that the same interaction exists between embryo apical and basal cells early in normal development.}},
  author       = {{Pennell, Roger I. and Cronk, Quentin C. B. and Forsberg, L. Scott and Stöhr, Christine and Snogerup, Lars and Kjellbom, Per and McCabe, Paul F.}},
  issn         = {{1471-2970}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1331}},
  pages        = {{87--93}},
  publisher    = {{Royal Society Publishing}},
  series       = {{Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences}},
  title        = {{Cell-context signalling}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1995.0142}},
  doi          = {{10.1098/rstb.1995.0142}},
  volume       = {{350}},
  year         = {{1995}},
}