Auxesis (from the Greek word meaning increase; grow) refers to growth from an increase in cell size rather than an increase in the number of cells. Auxetic growth occurs in certain tissues, such as muscle, of the higher animals as well as in some organisms, especially eutelic ones, such as nematodes, tunicates, and rotifers.[1][2]
In plant physiology, an auxetic substance will tend to increase cell growth without any cell division. Auxins are auxetic plant hormones.
References
edit- ^ Types of Growth: Auxetic Growth, Tutor Vista
- ^ Juo, Pei-show (21 December 2001). Concise Dictionary of Biomedicine and Molecular Biology. CRC Press. p. 130. ISBN 9781420041309.
See also
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