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Surrounded by luxury: The necessities of subsidiary cells.

Thanh-Hao NguyenMichael R Blatt
Published in: Plant, cell & environment (2024)
The evolution of stomata marks one of the key advances that enabled plants to colonise dry land while allowing gas exchange for photosynthesis. In large measure, stomata retain a common design across species that incorporates paired guard cells with little variation in structure. By contrast, the cells of the stomatal complex immediately surrounding the guard cells vary widely in shape, size and count. Their origins in development are similarly diverse. Thus, the surrounding cells are likely a luxury that the necessity of stomatal control cannot do without (with apologies to Oscar Wilde). Surrounding cells are thought to support stomatal movements as solute reservoirs and to shape stomatal kinetics through backpressure on the guard cells. Their variety may also reflect a substantial diversity in function. Certainly modelling, kinetic analysis and the few electrophysiological studies to date give hints of much more complex contributions in stomatal physiology. Even so, our knowledge of the cells surrounding the guard cells in the stomatal complex is far from complete.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance
  • signaling pathway
  • cell death
  • oxidative stress
  • cell proliferation