meristem

(noun)

the plant tissue composed of totipotent cells that allows plant growth

Related Terms

  • tracheid
  • stoma
  • undifferentiated
  • germination
  • xylem
  • radicle
  • parenchyma
  • apical
  • phloem

Examples of meristem in the following topics:

  • Meristems

    • The Shoot Apical Meristem (SAM) gives rise to organs like the leaves and flowers, while the Root Apical Meristem (RAM) provides the meristematic cells for the future root growth.
    • The two types of meristems are primary meristems and secondary meristems.
    • Apical meristems are organized into four zones: (1) the central zone, (2) the peripheral zone, (3) the medullary meristem and (3) the medullary tissue .
    • Peripheral zone cells give rise to cells which contribute to the organs of the plant, including leaves, inflorescence meristems, and floral meristems.
    • Each zone of the apical meristem has a particular function.
  • Genetic Control of Flowers

    • Flower development is the process by which angiosperms produce a pattern of gene expression in meristems that leads to the appearance of a flower.
    • the apical meristem must transform from a vegetative meristem into a floral meristem or inflorescence
    • A flower develops on a modified shoot or axis from a determinate apical meristem (determinate meaning the axis grows to a set size).
    • In the simple ABC model of floral development, three gene activities (termed A, B, and C-functions) interact to determine the developmental identities of the organ primordia (singular: primordium) within the floral meristem.
    • In order to achieve reproduction, the plant must become sexually mature, the apical meristem must become a floral meristem, and the flower must develop its individual reproductive organs.
  • Structural Adaptations for Land in Seedless Plants

    • Shoots and roots of plants increase in length through rapid cell division in a tissue called the apical meristem, which is a small zone of cells found at the shoot tip or root tip .
    • The apical meristem is made of undifferentiated cells that continue to proliferate throughout the life of the plant.
    • A separate meristem, called the lateral meristem, produces cells that increase the diameter of tree trunks.
    • Addition of new cells in a root occurs at the apical meristem.
    • The root cap protects the fragile apical meristem as the root tip is pushed through the soil by cell elongation.
  • Primary and Secondary Growth in Stems

    • It is the result of cell division in the shoot apical meristem .
    • It is caused by cell division in the lateral meristem .
    • Primary growth is a result of rapidly-dividing cells in the apical meristems at the shoot tip and root tip.
    • Lateral meristems include the vascular cambium and, in woody plants, the cork cambium .
    • In woody plants, cork cambium is the outermost lateral meristem.
  • Plant Tissues and Organ Systems

    • Cells of the meristematic tissue are found in meristems, which are plant regions of continuous cell division and growth.
    • Apical meristems contain meristematic tissue located at the tips of stems and roots, which enable a plant to extend in length.
    • Lateral meristems facilitate growth in thickness or girth in a maturing plant.
    • Intercalary meristems occur only in monocots at the bases of leaf blades and at nodes (the areas where leaves attach to a stem).
    • Meristems produce cells that quickly differentiate, or specialize, and become permanent tissue.
  • Auxins, Cytokinins, and Gibberellins

    • They also control the differentiation of meristem into vascular tissue and promote leaf development and arrangement.
    • Apical dominance (the inhibition of lateral bud formation) is triggered by auxins produced in the apical meristem.
    • Cytokinins are known to delay senescence in leaf tissues, promote mitosis, and stimulate differentiation of the meristem in shoots and roots.
    • GAs are synthesized in the root and stem apical meristems, young leaves, and seed embryos.
  • Mosses

    • Cells akin to an apical meristem actively divide and give rise to a gametophore, consisting of a photosynthetic stem and foliage-like structures.
    • Apical meristem-like cells divide and give rise to the gametophores.
  • Types of Root Systems and Zones of Growth

    • The zone of cell division is closest to the root tip and is made up of the actively-dividing cells of the root meristem, which contains the undifferentiated cells of the germinating plant.
    • Cell division occurs in the apical meristem.
  • Functions of Stems

    • The apex (tip) of the shoot contains the apical meristem within the apical bud.
  • The Evolution of Roots in Seedless Plants

    • The zone of cell division is closest to the root tip; it is made up of the actively-dividing cells of the root meristem.
    • Cell division occurs in the apical meristem.
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