apical meristem
- Related Topics:
- tunica
- shoot apical meristem
- corpus
- procambium
- protoderm
apical meristem, region of cells capable of division and growth in the root and shoot tips in plants. Apical meristems give rise to the primary plant body and are responsible for the extension of the roots and shoots. Unlike most animals, plants continue to grow throughout their entire life span because of the unlimited division of these and other meristems.
As in other meristematic regions, the cells of the apical meristems are typically small and nearly spherical. They have a dense cytoplasm and relatively few small vacuoles (watery saclike enclosures). Some of these cells, known as initials, maintain the meristem as a continuing source of new cells and may undergo mitosis (cell division) many times before differentiating into the specific cells required for root or shoot growth. The cells that emanate from the apical meristem are arranged in lineages of partially differentiated tissues known as primary meristems. There are three primary meristems: the protoderm, which will become the epidermis; the ground meristem, which will form the ground tissues comprising parenchyma, collenchyma, and sclerenchyma cells; and the procambium, which will become the vascular tissues (xylem and phloem).
Root apical meristem
The root apical meristem, or root apex, is a small region at the tip of a root in which all cells are capable of repeated division and from which all primary root tissues are derived. The root apical meristem is protected as it passes through the soil by an outer region of living parenchyma cells called the root cap. As the cells of the root cap are destroyed and sloughed off, new cells are added by a special internal layer of meristematic cells called the calyptrogen. Root hairs also begin to develop as simple extensions of cells near the root apical meristem. They greatly increase the surface area of the root and facilitate the absorption of water and minerals from the soil.
Beginning with the root cap and leading away from the root tip, there are three distinct zones in which certain specific growth patterns dominate: cell division, cell elongation, and differentiation and tissue maturation. There is a gradual transition between these regions. The region of cell division includes the apical meristem and the primary meristems—the protoderm, ground meristem, and procambium—derived from the apical meristem. As is generally true of nonmeristematic regions elsewhere in the plant body, root length in the second region is increased as a result of cell elongation rather than by cell division. The region of differentiation and tissue maturation that follows is where the cells differentiate (i.e., change in structure and physiology into cells of a specific type) and where the first primary phloem and xylem, as well as mature root hairs, are clearly seen. In plants with woody roots (i.e., those of perennial dicotyledons), secondary growth, including secondary xylem and phloem as well as the periderm, are developed and add girth to the plant.
Shoot apical meristem
All the branches and stems of higher vascular plants terminate in shoot apical meristems. These are centres of potentially indefinite growth and development, producing the leaves as well as a bud in the axis of most leaves that has the potential to grow out as a branch. These shoot apical growing centres form the primary plant body.
Shoot meristems in some species may interconvert and change the type of shoot they produce. For example, in the longleaf pine (Pinus palustris), the seedlings enter a grass stage, which may last as long as 15 years. Here the terminal bud on the main axis exists as a short shoot and produces numerous needle-bearing dwarf shoots in which there is little or no internode elongation. Consequently, the seedling resembles a clump of grass. This is probably an adaptation to fire, water stress, and perhaps grazing. The root volume, however, continues to grow, increasing the chance of seedling survival once the shoot begins to grow out (i.e., the internodes start to expand). This process is called flushing.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica