2010
DOI: 10.1080/07352680903436291
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Regulation of Somatic Embryogenesis in Higher Plants

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Cited by 271 publications
(218 citation statements)
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References 306 publications
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“…SE is one form of asexual reproduction by which somatic cells, under suitable induction conditions, undergo a complete genome shift and embark into a new developmental pathway ending in the formation of asexual embryos morphologically identical to their zygotic counterparts (Zimmerman, 1993;Schmidt et al, 1997;Arnold et al, 2002;Feher et al, 2003). During this unique developmental process, cells have to dedifferentiate, activate cell division, and reprogram their physiology, metabolism, and gene expression patterns (Yang and Zhang, 2010). Thus, SE is an ideal demonstration of plant totipotency, which represents how a somatic cells contain the essential genetic draft for complete plant development without fertilization (Zimmerman, 1993 Kamle et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SE is one form of asexual reproduction by which somatic cells, under suitable induction conditions, undergo a complete genome shift and embark into a new developmental pathway ending in the formation of asexual embryos morphologically identical to their zygotic counterparts (Zimmerman, 1993;Schmidt et al, 1997;Arnold et al, 2002;Feher et al, 2003). During this unique developmental process, cells have to dedifferentiate, activate cell division, and reprogram their physiology, metabolism, and gene expression patterns (Yang and Zhang, 2010). Thus, SE is an ideal demonstration of plant totipotency, which represents how a somatic cells contain the essential genetic draft for complete plant development without fertilization (Zimmerman, 1993 Kamle et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Summary of extracellular chitinase profiles in cultivation media of Pinus nigra cell lines with different embryogenic potential (EP). [45]. Until now, some protein markers for embryogenic potential were described [16,24,25,[46][47][48][49][50][51], as well as a structural marker of embryogenic competency and regeneration ability [52].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SE begins with a transition of somatic cells to an embryogenic state and it can be induced under certain in vitro conditions. The mechanisms which determine SE induction -the transition of cells from the vegetative to the embryogenic state and the conditions underlying such changes -are the main questions of developmental biology (for a review see: de Jong et al, 1993;von Arnold et al, 2002;Fehér et al, 2003;Namasivayam, 2007;Yang & Zhang, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%