A wall with integrity: surveillance and maintenance of the plant cell wall under stress
The structural and functional integrity of the cell wall needs to be constantly monitored and fine-tuned to allow for growth while preventing mechanical failure. Many studies have advanced our understanding of the pathways that contribute to cell wall biosynthesis and how these pathways are regulate...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The New phytologist 2020-02, Vol.225 (4), p.1428-1439 |
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creator | Rui, Yue Dinneny, José R. |
description | The structural and functional integrity of the cell wall needs to be constantly monitored and fine-tuned to allow for growth while preventing mechanical failure. Many studies have advanced our understanding of the pathways that contribute to cell wall biosynthesis and how these pathways are regulated by external and internal cues. Recent evidence also supports a model in which certain aspects of the wall itself may act as growth-regulating signals. Molecular components of the signaling pathways that sense and maintain cell wall integrity have begun to be revealed, including signals arising in the wall, sensors that detect changes at the cell surface, and downstream signal transduction modules. Abiotic and biotic stress conditions provide new contexts for the study of cell wall integrity, but the nature and consequences of wall disruptions due to various stressors require further investigation. A deeper understanding of cell wall signaling will provide insights into the growth regulatory mechanisms that allow plants to survive in changing environments. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/nph.16166 |
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Many studies have advanced our understanding of the pathways that contribute to cell wall biosynthesis and how these pathways are regulated by external and internal cues. Recent evidence also supports a model in which certain aspects of the wall itself may act as growth-regulating signals. Molecular components of the signaling pathways that sense and maintain cell wall integrity have begun to be revealed, including signals arising in the wall, sensors that detect changes at the cell surface, and downstream signal transduction modules. Abiotic and biotic stress conditions provide new contexts for the study of cell wall integrity, but the nature and consequences of wall disruptions due to various stressors require further investigation. 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subjects | Biosynthesis Cell Membrane - physiology Cell surface cell wall Cell Wall - physiology Cell walls Change detection Changing environments Cytoskeleton - physiology Growth Integrity maintenance Mechanical failure perception Plant Cells - physiology Regulatory mechanisms (biology) signal Signal transduction Signal Transduction - physiology Signaling stress Stress, Physiological Structure-function relationships Survival Tansley review wall integrity |
title | A wall with integrity: surveillance and maintenance of the plant cell wall under stress |
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