Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the process of vein pattern formation in plant tissues. The most widely accepted amongst biologists is the canalization hypothesis, derived from pea root and stem experiments. According to this hypothesis, a signal, thought to be the phytohormone auxin, is transported polarly from cell to cell from the shoot to the root and is canalized progressively into narrow channels of high auxin fluxes that later differentiate to become vascular tissue. In this project, we set out to test whether auxin canalization drives vein pattern formation, using Arabidopsis thaliana mutants with increased auxin transport (max4-1, max3-9, max2-1 and max1-1). We predicted that the mutants would have distinct vei...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
AbstractHow the complex patterns of plant vascular systems are generated is largely unknown. Advance...
This article comments on: Kneuper I, Teale W, Dawson JE, Tsugeki R, Katifori E, Palme K, Ditengou ...
The vegetative hormone Auxin is involved in vascular tissues formation throughout the plant. Trans-m...
AbstractVein formation is an important process in plant leaf development. The phytohormone auxin is ...
<div><p>The formation of leaf vein patterns has fascinated biologists for centuries. Transport of th...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
During embryogenesis and post-embryonic patterning, active transport of the phytohormone auxin, refl...
The plant hormone auxin has been implicated in many diverse processes in plant development including...
Pattern formation is typically controlled through the interaction between molecular signals within a...
During embryogenesis and post-embryonic patterning, active transport of the phytohormone auxin, refl...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
AbstractHow the complex patterns of plant vascular systems are generated is largely unknown. Advance...
This article comments on: Kneuper I, Teale W, Dawson JE, Tsugeki R, Katifori E, Palme K, Ditengou ...
The vegetative hormone Auxin is involved in vascular tissues formation throughout the plant. Trans-m...
AbstractVein formation is an important process in plant leaf development. The phytohormone auxin is ...
<div><p>The formation of leaf vein patterns has fascinated biologists for centuries. Transport of th...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
During embryogenesis and post-embryonic patterning, active transport of the phytohormone auxin, refl...
The plant hormone auxin has been implicated in many diverse processes in plant development including...
Pattern formation is typically controlled through the interaction between molecular signals within a...
During embryogenesis and post-embryonic patterning, active transport of the phytohormone auxin, refl...
Polar auxin transport lies at the core of many self-organizing phenomena sustaining continuous plant...
AbstractHow the complex patterns of plant vascular systems are generated is largely unknown. Advance...
This article comments on: Kneuper I, Teale W, Dawson JE, Tsugeki R, Katifori E, Palme K, Ditengou ...