(Press-News.org) Contact information: Wim Grunewald
info@vib.be
32-924-46611
VIB (the Flanders Institute for Biotechnology)
Why plants usually live longer then animals
Ghent, 24 October –Stem cells are crucial for the continuous generation of new cells. Although the importance of stem cells in fuelling plant growth and development still many questions on their tight molecular control remain unanswered. Plant researchers at VIB and Ghent University discovered a new step in the complex regulation of stem cells. Today, their results are published online in this week's issue of Science Express.
Lieven De Veylder: "Our data suggest that certain organizing stem cells in plant roots are less sensitive for DNA-damage. Those cells hold an original and intact DNA copy which can be used to replace damaged cells if necessary. Animals rely on a similar mechanism but most likely plants have employed this in a more optimized manner. This could explain why many plants can live for more than hundreds of years, while this is quite exceptional for animals."
Quiescent organisers of plant growth
Plant growth and development depend on the continuous generation of new cells. A small group of specialized cells present in the growth axes of a plant is driving this. These so-called stem cells divide at a high frequency and have the unique characteristic that the original mother cell keeps the stem cell activity while the daughter cell acquires a certain specialization. Besides these stem cells, plant roots also harbor organizing cells. These organizing cells divide with a three- to ten-fold lower frequency, therefore often referred to as quiescent center cells. The organizing cells control the action of the surrounding stem cells and can replace them if necessary.
A new molecular network
For almost 20 years, scientists all over the world have been studying the action of the stem cells and that of their controlling organizing cells. Until now it was not known how quiescent and actively dividing cells could co-exist so closely and which mechanisms are at the basis of the quiescent character. Plant researchers at VIB and Ghent University have now identified a new molecular network that increases our understanding of stem cell regulation and activity. Central in this process is the discovery of a new protein, the ERF115 transcription factor. The scientists demonstrated that the organizing cells barely divide because of the inhibition of ERF115 activity. When the organizing cells need to divide to replace damaged surrounding stem cells, ERF115 gets activated. ERF115 then stimulates the production of the plant hormone phytosulfokine which in turn activates the division of the organizing cells. Thus, the ERF115-phytosulfokine network acts as a back-up system during stress conditions which are detrimental for the activity of stem cells.
### END
Why plants usually live longer then animals
2013-10-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Foreign private patients provide a lucrative source of NHS income
2013-10-25
Foreign private patients provide a lucrative source of NHS income
Foreign patients coming to the UK for private medical treatment are a lucrative source of income for the NHS, according to a new study by researchers at the London School ...
Study ties bone marrow transplant to negative sexual side effects
2013-10-25
Study ties bone marrow transplant to negative sexual side effects
Radiation, graft-versus-host disease cited as particularly damaging
(WASHINGTON – October 24, 2013) – New research ties preparative procedures and complications associated with blood or bone ...
Grasshopper mice are numb to the pain of the bark scorpion sting
2013-10-25
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 24-Oct-2013
[
| E-mail
]
var addthis_pub="eurekalert"; var addthis_options = "favorites, delicious, digg, facebook, twitter, google, newsvine, reddit, slashdot, stumbleupon, buzz, more"
Share
Contact: Ashlee Rowe
roweashl@msu.edu
517-432-4468
Michigan State University
Harold Zakon
h.zakon@mail.utexas.edu
University of Texas at Austin
Grasshopper mice are numb to the pain of the bark scorpion sting
The painful, potentially deadly stings of bark scorpions are nothing more than a slight nuisance to grasshopper mice, which ...
Behavior problems in preschool and child care centers may be an issue of genes
2013-10-25
Behavior problems in preschool and child care centers may be an issue of genes
BEND, Ore. – A new study suggests that some children may be genetically predisposed to developing behavioral problems in child care and preschool settings.
Previous ...
NASA sees Super-typhoon Lekima ready to make the curve
2013-10-25
NASA sees Super-typhoon Lekima ready to make the curve
Super-typhoon Lekima is poised to "make the curve" in the northwestern Pacific Ocean today. The storm's track is expected to shift from a northwesterly direction, and curve to northeasterly direction because ...
Preclinical study finds drug helps against pancreatic cancer
2013-10-25
Preclinical study finds drug helps against pancreatic cancer
October 23, 2013—(BRONX, NY)—An investigational drug that disrupts tumor blood vessels shows promise against a rare type of pancreatic cancer, scientists at Albert Einstein College ...
Could the Colorado River once have flowed into the Labrador Sea?
2013-10-25
Could the Colorado River once have flowed into the Labrador Sea?
November 2013 GSA Today
Boulder, Colorado, USA – In the November issue of GSA Today, James W. Sears of the University of Montana in Missoula advocates a possible Canadian connection for the early Miocene ...
Young, black women at highest risk for lupus, suffer more life-threatening complications
2013-10-25
Young, black women at highest risk for lupus, suffer more life-threatening complications
Lupus disparities in southeastern Michigan: Black females develop disease during prime reproductive years, at higher risk for kidney and neurologic complications
ANN ...
MTV, AP-NORC Center survey finds that online bullying has declined
2013-10-25
MTV, AP-NORC Center survey finds that online bullying has declined
Report shows downward trend across 26 of 27 forms of digital abuse, incidence of sexting drops nearly 20 percent, less than half of young people report experiencing digital abuse
New York, ...
ALMA reveals ghostly shape of 'coldest place in the universe'
2013-10-25
ALMA reveals ghostly shape of 'coldest place in the universe'
At a cosmologically crisp one degree Kelvin (minus 458 degrees Fahrenheit), the Boomerang Nebula is the coldest known object in the Universe – colder, in fact, than the faint afterglow of ...