Adventitious roots (AR) are de novo formed roots that emerge from any part of the plant or from callus in tissue culture, except root tissue. The plant tissue origin and the method by which they are induced determine the physiological properties of emerged ARs. Hence, a standard method encompassing all types of AR does not exist. Here we describe a method for the induction and analysis of AR that emerge from the etiolated hypocotyl of dicot plants. The hypocotyl is formed during embryogenesis and shows a determined developmental pattern which usually does not involve AR formation. However, the hypocotyl shows propensity to form de novo roots under specific circumstances such as removal of the root system, high humidity or flooding, or durin...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (AR) are de novo formed roots that emerge from any part of the plant or from call...
Adventitious roots (AR) are de novo formed roots that emerge from any part of the plant or from call...
Adventitious root formation, the development of roots on non-root tissue (e.g. leaves, hypocotyls an...
Adventitious roots (AR) are a special type of roots that by definition do not emerge from other root...
Adventititous rooting is essential for the post-embryonic growth of the root apparatus in various sp...
Wound-induced adventitious root (AR) formation is a requirement for plant survival upon root damage ...
Adventitious root formation (ARF) is an essential step in vegetative propagation. In the understandi...
Adventitious rooting is important process because it is a critical step during the propagation of pl...
This paper describes, for the first time, de novo adventitious root formation from thin cell layers ...
• Upon exposure to light, etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings form adventitious roots (AR) along the ...
<p>Adventitious root (AR) formation is indispensable in vegetative propagation and is widely used. A...
Adventitious root (AR) formation is indispensable in vegetative propagation and is widely used. A be...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (AR) are de novo formed roots that emerge from any part of the plant or from call...
Adventitious roots (AR) are de novo formed roots that emerge from any part of the plant or from call...
Adventitious root formation, the development of roots on non-root tissue (e.g. leaves, hypocotyls an...
Adventitious roots (AR) are a special type of roots that by definition do not emerge from other root...
Adventititous rooting is essential for the post-embryonic growth of the root apparatus in various sp...
Wound-induced adventitious root (AR) formation is a requirement for plant survival upon root damage ...
Adventitious root formation (ARF) is an essential step in vegetative propagation. In the understandi...
Adventitious rooting is important process because it is a critical step during the propagation of pl...
This paper describes, for the first time, de novo adventitious root formation from thin cell layers ...
• Upon exposure to light, etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings form adventitious roots (AR) along the ...
<p>Adventitious root (AR) formation is indispensable in vegetative propagation and is widely used. A...
Adventitious root (AR) formation is indispensable in vegetative propagation and is widely used. A be...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...
Adventitious roots (ARs) are formed de novo during post-embryonic development from non-root tissues,...