Background Flowers have a species-specific, limited life span with an irreversible programme of senescence, which is largely independent of environmental factors, unlike leaf senescence, which is much more closely linked with external stimuli. Timing Life span of the whole flower is regulated for ecological and energetic reasons, but the death of individual tissues and cells within the flower is co-ordinated at many levels to ensure correct timing. Some floral cells die selectively during organ development, whereas others are retained until the whole organ dies. Triggers Pollination is an important floral cell death trigger in many species, and its effects are mediated by the plant growth regulator (PGR) ethylene. In some species ethylene...
Programmed cell death (PCD) describes a small number of processes that result in a highly controlled...
Programmed cell death (PCD) applies to cell death that is part of the normal life of multicellular o...
We isolated several senescence-associated genes (SAGs) from the petals of morning glory (Ipomoea nil...
Current knowledge indicates that flower petal senescence is a form of programmed cell death called v...
Floral senescence involves an ordered set of events coordinated at the plant, flower, organ and cell...
Flower senescence is the terminal phase of developmental processes that lead to the death of flower,...
In flowers, some parts undergo CD and fall, like stamina and petals of the corolla. The petal senesc...
In the petals of some species of flowers, programmed cell death (PCD) begins earlier in mesophyll ce...
none5According to the Nomenclature Committee on Cell Death (Kroemer et al., 2005), a generally accep...
Senescence in flower petals can be regarded as a form of programmed cell death (PCD), being a proces...
Floral senescence does not follow the same pattern in all flowering species. Flowers can be broadly ...
Senescence is a highly regulated process terminating with programmed cell death (PCD). Floral senesc...
<div><p>In the petals of some species of flowers, programmed cell death (PCD) begins earlier in meso...
Flowers have a species-specific functional life span that determines the time window in which pollin...
none5According to the Nomenclature Committee on Cell Death (Kroemer et al., 2005), a generally accep...
Programmed cell death (PCD) describes a small number of processes that result in a highly controlled...
Programmed cell death (PCD) applies to cell death that is part of the normal life of multicellular o...
We isolated several senescence-associated genes (SAGs) from the petals of morning glory (Ipomoea nil...
Current knowledge indicates that flower petal senescence is a form of programmed cell death called v...
Floral senescence involves an ordered set of events coordinated at the plant, flower, organ and cell...
Flower senescence is the terminal phase of developmental processes that lead to the death of flower,...
In flowers, some parts undergo CD and fall, like stamina and petals of the corolla. The petal senesc...
In the petals of some species of flowers, programmed cell death (PCD) begins earlier in mesophyll ce...
none5According to the Nomenclature Committee on Cell Death (Kroemer et al., 2005), a generally accep...
Senescence in flower petals can be regarded as a form of programmed cell death (PCD), being a proces...
Floral senescence does not follow the same pattern in all flowering species. Flowers can be broadly ...
Senescence is a highly regulated process terminating with programmed cell death (PCD). Floral senesc...
<div><p>In the petals of some species of flowers, programmed cell death (PCD) begins earlier in meso...
Flowers have a species-specific functional life span that determines the time window in which pollin...
none5According to the Nomenclature Committee on Cell Death (Kroemer et al., 2005), a generally accep...
Programmed cell death (PCD) describes a small number of processes that result in a highly controlled...
Programmed cell death (PCD) applies to cell death that is part of the normal life of multicellular o...
We isolated several senescence-associated genes (SAGs) from the petals of morning glory (Ipomoea nil...