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Defining senescence and death. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The article explores leaf and flower senescence, highlighting that some changes during this process can be reversible, challenging the notion of it being merely deterioration.
  • It suggests that irreversible senescence might signal a loss of evolutionary plasticity, distinguishing it from programmed cell death (PCD), which requires cell viability.
  • Key roles of the vacuole in senescence include protecting the cell, accumulating beneficial metabolites, and ultimately leading to cell death, while emphasizing that senescence and PCD are fundamentally different processes.

Article Abstract

This article evaluates features of leaf and flower senescence that are shared with, or are different from, those of other terminal events in plant development. Alterations of plastid structure and function in senescence are often reversible and it is argued that such changes represent a process of transdifferentiation or metaplasia rather than deterioration. It may be that the irreversible senescence of many flowers and some leaves represents the loss of ancestral plasticity during evolution. Reversibility serves to distinguish senescence fundamentally from programmed cell death (PCD), as does the fact that viability is essential for the initiation and progress of cell senescence. Senescence (particularly its timing and location) requires new gene transcription, but the syndrome is also subject to significant post- transcriptional and post-translational regulation. The reversibility of senescence must relate to the plastic, facultative nature of underlying molecular controls. Senescence appears to be cell-autonomous, though definitive evidence is required to substantiate this. The vacuole plays at least three key roles in the development of senescing cells: it defends the cell against biotic and abiotic damage, thus preserving viability, it accumulates metabolites with other functions, such as animal attractants, and it terminates senescence by becoming autolytic and facilitating true cell death. The mechanisms of PCD in plants bear a certain relation to those of apoptosis, and some processes, such as nucleic acid degradation, are superficially similar to aspects of the senescence syndrome. It is concluded that, in terms of physiological components and their controls, senescence and PCD are at best only distantly related.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erg133DOI Listing

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