Root tips moving through soil: an intrinsic vulnerability
- PMID: 21455030
- PMCID: PMC3172849
- DOI: 10.4161/psb.6.5.15107
Root tips moving through soil: an intrinsic vulnerability
Abstract
Root elongation occurs by the generation of new cells from meristematic tissue within the apical 1-2 mm region of root tips. Therefore penetration of the soil environment is carried out by newly synthesized plant tissue, whose cells are inherently vulnerable to invasion by pathogens. This conundrum, on its face, would seem to reflect an intolerable risk to the successful establishment of root systems needed for plant life. Yet root tip regions housing the meristematic tissues repeatedly have been found to be free of microbial infection and colonization. Even when spore germination, chemotaxis, and/or growth of pathogens are stimulated by signals from the root tip, the underlying root tissue can escape invasion. Recent insights into the functions of root border cells, and the regulation of their production by transient exposure to external signals, may shed light on long-standing observations.
Comment on
- Curlango-Rivera G, Duclos DV, Ebolo JJ, Hawes MC. Transient exposure of root tips to primary and secondary metabolites: Impact on root growth and production of border cells. Plant Soil. 2010;306:206–216. doi: 10.1007/s11104-010-0.
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