Plant grafting is conducted for vegetative propagation in plants, whereby a piece of 1 living tissue is attached to another tissue through establishment of cell-cell adhesion. 2Plant grafting has a long history in agriculture and has been applied to improve 3 crop traits for thousands of years 1 . Plant grafting has mostly relied on the natural 4 ability of a plant for wound healing. However, the compatibility of cell-cell adhesion 5 typically limits graft combinations to closely related species 2-4 , and the mechanism 6 by which cell-cell adhesion of injured tissues is established is largely unknown. Here, 7we show that a subclade of β-1,4-glucanases secreted into the extracellular region 8 facilitates cell-cell adhesion near the graft interface. Nicotiana shows a propensity 9 for cell-cell adhesion with a diverse range of angiosperms, including vegetables, 10 fruit trees, and monocots, in which cell wall reconstruction was promoted in a 11 similar manner to conventional intrafamily grafting 5-7 . Using transcriptomic 12 approaches, we identified a specific clade of β-1,4-glucanases that is upregulated 13 during grafting in successful graft combinations but not in incompatible grafts and 14 precedes graft adhesion in inter-and intrafamily grafts. Grafting was facilitated 15 with an overexpressor of the β-1,4-glucanase and, using Nicotiana stem as an 16 interscion, we produced tomato fruits on rootstocks from other plant families. Our 17 results demonstrate that the mechanism of cell-cell adhesion is partly conserved in 18 plants and is a potential target to enhance plant grafting techniques. 19