Abstract
The mechanisms by which exogenously applied plant growth regulators act to express those genes that are selectively involved in cell and tissue differentiation are not at all well comprehended. However, the ontogenetic sequences of events that enable receptor or target cells to be activated and to undergo dedifferentiation and redifferentiation, can often be followed experimentally and can lead to a better understanding of the causal relations and control mechanisms in coordinated cell growth and development. Cytokinins, applied either in an agar medium or as high-concentration, short-duration pulses to expiants or as high-concentration, intermittent sprays to intact plants, induce switches in the normal developmental pattern of cells of certain explanted tissues. Examples of cells that are particularly receptive are the subsidiary cells of stomatal complexes and the differentiating cells of very young presumptive leaf primordia, that is before the latter have become irreversibly determined as leaves.
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