Abstract

Shoot regeneration is a key tool of modern plant biotechnology. While many researchers use this process empirically, very little is known about the early molecular genetic factors and signaling events that lead to shoot regeneration. Using tobacco as a model system, we found that the inductive events required for shoot regeneration occur in the first 4–5 days following incubation on regeneration medium. Leaf segments placed on regeneration medium did not produce shoots if removed from the medium before four days indicating this time frame is crucial for the induction of shoot regeneration. Leaf segments placed on regeneration medium for longer than five days maintain the capacity to produce shoots when removed from the regeneration medium. Analysis of gene expression during the early days of incubation on regeneration medium revealed many changes occurring with no single expression pattern evident among major gene families previously implicated in developmental processes. For example, expression of Knotted gene family members increased during the induction period, whereas transcription factors from the Wuschel gene family were unaltered during shoot induction. Expression levels of genes involved in cell cycle regulation increased steadily on regeneration medium while expression of NAC genes varied. No obvious possible candidate genes or developmental processes could be identified as a target for the early events (first few days) in the induction of shoot regeneration. On the other hand, observations during the early stages of regeneration pointed out that regeneration does not occur from a single cell but a group of cells. We observed that while cell division starts just as leaf segments are placed on regeneration medium, only a group of cells could become shoot primordia. Still, these primordia are not identifiable during the first days.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.In 2005, the question “How does a single somatic cell become a whole plant?” was among the 25 most important questions in the quarter-century of biology [1]

  • We studied the development of plasmodesmatal connections in new cells that grow during the regeneration induction period (0 to 7 days on Reg medium)

  • The above findings indicate the interplay among plant growth regulators and the complexity of the interactions involved in shoot regeneration

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.In 2005, the question “How does a single somatic cell become a whole plant?” was among the 25 most important questions in the quarter-century of biology [1]. Somatic regeneration or embryogenesis is a synthetic process where a plant shoot or embryo (embryogenesis) or a root (rhizogenesis) is formed from a single somatic cell. What remains to be determined is whether the reprogramming of somatic cells into a new shoot or root is truly embryogenesis since only a partial plant is formed. Whether this is a direct embryogenesis from a single cell or indirect process from a multicellular origin. Regeneration occurs in response to applying exogenously applied phytohormones and plant growth regulators (PGRs), with auxins and cytokinins being the most significant. Somatic embryos and shoots are a powerful biotechnological tool for plant propagation and genetic improvement

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