Wall extensibility: its nature, measurement and relationship to plant cell growth
- 1 May 1993
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 124 (1), 1-23
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1993.tb03795.x
Abstract
Expansive growth of plant cells is controlled principally by processes that loosen the wall and enable it to expand irreversibly. The central role of wall relaxation for cell expansion is reviewed. The most common methods for assessing the extension properties of plant cell walls ( wall extensibility') are described, categorized and assessed critically. What emerges are three fundamentally different approaches which test growing cells for their ability (a) to enlarge at different values of turgor, (b) to induce wall relaxation, and (c) to deform elastically or plastically in response to an applied tensile force. Analogous methods with isolated walls are similarly reviewed. The results of these different assays are related to the nature of plant cell growth and pertinent biophysical theory. I argue that the extensibilities' measured by these assays are fundamentally different from one another and that some are more pertinent to growth than others.Keywords
This publication has 106 references indexed in Scilit:
- Water Relations of Growing Maize ColeoptilesPlant Physiology, 1991
- Wall Relaxation and the Driving Forces for Cell Expansive GrowthPlant Physiology, 1987
- A mechanism of respiration-dependent water uptake enhanced by auxinProtoplasma, 1986
- Cell Wall Yield Properties of Growing TissuePlant Physiology, 1985
- Leaf Water and Turgor Potential Threshold Values for Leaf Growth of Wheat1Agronomy Journal, 1984
- Solutes in the Free Space of Growing Stem TissuesPlant Physiology, 1983
- A membrane model of plant cell extensionJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1974
- Metabolic and Physical Control of Cell Elongation RatePlant Physiology, 1971
- An analysis of irreversible plant cell elongationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1965
- Effect of Osmotic Concentration on Auxin‐action and on Irreversible and Reversible Expansion of the Avena ColeoptilePhysiologia Plantarum, 1959