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meristems
Characteristically, vascular plants grow and develop through the activity of organ-
forming regions, the growing points. The mechanical support and additional conductive
pathways needed by increased bulk are provided by the enlargement of the older parts
of the shoot and root axes. New cells are added through the activity of special tissues
called meristems, the cells of which are small, intensely active metabolically, and
densely packed with organelles and membranes, but usually lacking the fluid-filled sacs
called vacuoles. Meristems may be classified according to their location in the plant and
their special functions. One important distinction is between persistent meristems,
typified by those of the growing points, and meristems with a limited life, those
associated with organs, such as the leaf, of determinate growth. The regions of rapid cell
division at the tips (apices) of the stem and the root are terminal meristems. In the stem
apex, the uppermost part is the promeristem, below which is a zone of transversely
oriented early cell walls, the file, or rib, meristem. The procambium is a meristematic
tissue concerned with providing the primary tissues of the vascular system;
the cambium proper is the continuous cylinder of meristematic cells responsible for
producing the new vascular tissues in mature stems and roots. The cork cambium, or
phellogen, produces the protective outer layers of the bark.
The number of dividing cells in persistent meristems remains roughly constant, with
one of the daughter cells of each division remaining meristematic and the
other differentiating as a component of a developing organ. The geometrical
arrangements in the particular organ determine the way in which this occurs, but in
general the consequence is that the meristem is continuously moving away from the
maturing tissue as growth continues. It remains, therefore, a localized zone of
specialized tissue, never becoming diluted by the interposition of expanding or
differentiating cells. In organs such as leaves, flowers, and fruits, in which the growth is
determinate, the divisions of meristematic cells become more widely scattered, and the
frequency progressively falls as the proportion of the daughter cells
that differentiate increases. Ultimately, at maturity, no localized meristem remains.
The contribution of cells and tissues
The two major factors determining the forms of plant tissues and organs are the
orientation of the planes of cell division and the shapes assumed by the cells as they
enlarge. Clearly, if the division planes in a cell mass are randomly oriented and
individual cells expand uniformly, the tissue will enlarge as a sphere. On the other hand,
if cell division planes are oriented regularly or the expansion of individual cells is
directional, the tissue can assume any of a number of shapes. In a stem, for example, the
cell division planes of the promeristem are oriented at various angles to the stem axis, so
that new cells produced contribute to both width and length. Below this region, in the
rib meristem, the proportion of divisions with the cell plate at right angles to the axis
increases, so that the cells tend to be oriented in files. The cells in these files expand
vertically more than they do horizontally, and, accordingly, the stem develops as a
cylinder.
The factors that control the orientation of cell division planes in meristems are largely
unknown. Cell interactions, however, are presumed to coordinate the distribution and
orientation of the divisions. In each cell microtubules in the cytoplasm help to orient the
nucleus before it divides. Then, at the time of the division, other microtubules arranged
in a spindle-shaped figure (the mitotic spindle) are involved in separating the daughter
chromosomes and moving them to opposite ends of the parent cell. Thereafter, the
residual part of the spindle helps to locate the plate that separates the two daughter
cells. Microtubules are also concerned in determining the direction of growth in
expanding cells, since they appear to influence the construction of the cell wall by
controlling the way cellulose is laid down in it.
Although change in shape is a form of cell differentiation, the term in the more general
sense refers to a change in function, usually accompanied by specialization and the loss
of the capacity for further division. Biochemical differentiation often involves a change
in the character of the cell organelles—as when a generalized potential pigment body
(proplastid) matures as a chloroplast, a chlorophyll-containing plastid. But it may also
involve structural changes at a subcellular level, as when organelles change their
character in cells engaged in intense metabolic activity.