Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications

Grafting, an old plant propagation practice, is still widely used with fruit trees and in recent decades also with vegetables. Taxonomic proximity is a general prerequisite for successful graft-take and long-term survival of the grafted, composite plant. However, the mechanisms underlying interspeci...

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Main Author: Eliezer E Goldschmidt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00727/full
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spelling doaj-a5bcfade788f4e929dd41e099365a7902020-11-25T00:35:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2014-12-01510.3389/fpls.2014.00727109919Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implicationsEliezer E Goldschmidt0The Hebrew University of JerusalemGrafting, an old plant propagation practice, is still widely used with fruit trees and in recent decades also with vegetables. Taxonomic proximity is a general prerequisite for successful graft-take and long-term survival of the grafted, composite plant. However, the mechanisms underlying interspecific graft incompatibility are as yet insufficiently understood. Hormonal signals, auxin in particular, are believed to play an important role in the wound healing and vascular regeneration within the graft union zone. Long-distance protein, mRNA and small RNA graft-transmissible signals currently emerge as novel mechanisms which regulate nutritional and developmental root/top relations and may play a pivotal role in grafting physiology. Grafting also has significant pathogenic projections. On one hand, stock to scion mechanical contact enables the spread of diseases, even without a complete graft union. But, on the other hand, grafting onto resistant rootstocks serves as a principal tool in the management of fruit tree plagues and vegetable soil-borne diseases. The ‘graft hybrid’ historic controversy has not yet been resolved. Recent evidence suggests that epigenetic modification of DNA-methylation patterns may account for certain graft-transformation phenomena. Root grafting is a wide spread natural phenomenon; both intraspecific and interspecific root grafts have been recorded. Root grafts have an evolutionary role in the survival of storm-hit forest stands as well as in the spread of devastating diseases. A more fundamental evolutionary role is hinted by recent findings that demonstrate plastid and nuclear genome transfer between distinct Nicotiana species in the graft union zone, within a tissue culture system. This has led to the formation of alloploid cells that, under laboratory conditions, gave rise to a novel, alloploid Nicotiana species, indicating that natural grafts may play a role in plant speciation. under certain circumstances.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00727/fullepigeneticsmicroRNAgenome transfergraft hybridsincompatibilitylong-distance signals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eliezer E Goldschmidt
spellingShingle Eliezer E Goldschmidt
Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
Frontiers in Plant Science
epigenetics
microRNA
genome transfer
graft hybrids
incompatibility
long-distance signals
author_facet Eliezer E Goldschmidt
author_sort Eliezer E Goldschmidt
title Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
title_short Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
title_full Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
title_fullStr Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
title_full_unstemmed Plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
title_sort plant grafting: new mechanisms, evolutionary implications
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Grafting, an old plant propagation practice, is still widely used with fruit trees and in recent decades also with vegetables. Taxonomic proximity is a general prerequisite for successful graft-take and long-term survival of the grafted, composite plant. However, the mechanisms underlying interspecific graft incompatibility are as yet insufficiently understood. Hormonal signals, auxin in particular, are believed to play an important role in the wound healing and vascular regeneration within the graft union zone. Long-distance protein, mRNA and small RNA graft-transmissible signals currently emerge as novel mechanisms which regulate nutritional and developmental root/top relations and may play a pivotal role in grafting physiology. Grafting also has significant pathogenic projections. On one hand, stock to scion mechanical contact enables the spread of diseases, even without a complete graft union. But, on the other hand, grafting onto resistant rootstocks serves as a principal tool in the management of fruit tree plagues and vegetable soil-borne diseases. The ‘graft hybrid’ historic controversy has not yet been resolved. Recent evidence suggests that epigenetic modification of DNA-methylation patterns may account for certain graft-transformation phenomena. Root grafting is a wide spread natural phenomenon; both intraspecific and interspecific root grafts have been recorded. Root grafts have an evolutionary role in the survival of storm-hit forest stands as well as in the spread of devastating diseases. A more fundamental evolutionary role is hinted by recent findings that demonstrate plastid and nuclear genome transfer between distinct Nicotiana species in the graft union zone, within a tissue culture system. This has led to the formation of alloploid cells that, under laboratory conditions, gave rise to a novel, alloploid Nicotiana species, indicating that natural grafts may play a role in plant speciation. under certain circumstances.
topic epigenetics
microRNA
genome transfer
graft hybrids
incompatibility
long-distance signals
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00727/full
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