From Single Cell to Plants: Mesophyll Protoplasts as a Versatile System for Investigating Plant Cell Reprogramming

Int J Mol Sci. 2020 Jun 12;21(12):4195. doi: 10.3390/ijms21124195.

Abstract

Plants are sessile organisms that have a remarkable developmental plasticity, which ensures their optimal adaptation to environmental stresses. Plant cell totipotency is an extreme example of such plasticity, whereby somatic cells have the potential to form plants via direct shoot organogenesis or somatic embryogenesis in response to various exogenous and/or endogenous signals. Protoplasts provide one of the most suitable systems for investigating molecular mechanisms of totipotency, because they are effectively single cell populations. In this review, we consider the current state of knowledge of the mechanisms that induce cell proliferation from individual, differentiated somatic plant cells. We highlight initial explant metabolic status, ploidy level and isolation procedure as determinants of successful cell reprogramming. We also discuss the importance of auxin signalling and its interaction with stress-regulated pathways in governing cell cycle induction and further stages of plant cell totipotency.

Keywords: cell cycle; epigenetics; protoplasts; reprogramming; totipotency.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cell Differentiation
  • Cell Proliferation
  • Cellular Reprogramming
  • Mesophyll Cells / cytology*
  • Plant Physiological Phenomena
  • Ploidies
  • Protoplasts / cytology*
  • Signal Transduction
  • Totipotent Stem Cells / cytology*