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CHAPTER 36 LECTURE SLIDES Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Plant Form Chapter 36 Plant Body Organization • A vascular plant consists of • Root system – Anchors the plant – Used to absorb water and ions • Shoot system – Consists of supporting stems, photosynthetic leaves, and reproductive flowers – Iterative unit consists of internode, node, leaf, and axillary bud 3 4 • 3 basic tissue types – Dermal – outer protective cover – Ground – function in storage, photosynthesis, and secretion – Vascular – conducts fluids and dissolved substances • Tissues consist of one or more cell types • Tissue systems – each of these tissue types extends through root and shoot systems 5 • Distinguishing plant cell types based on – Size of vacuoles – Living or not at maturity – Thickness of secretions found in their cellulose cell walls • Some cells have only a primary cell wall of cellulose, synthesized at the protoplast (cell membrane) • Some cells have more heavily reinforced cell walls with multiple layers of cellulose 6 7 • Meristems – Clumps of small cells with dense cytoplasm and large nuclei – Act as stem cells do in animals – One cell divides producing a differentiating cell and another that remains meristematic – Plant biologists use term meristem cell rather than stem cell to avoid confusion – Extension of shoot and root produced by apical meristems – Lateral meristems produce an increase in shoot and root diameter 8 9 • Apical meristem • Located at tips of stems and roots • Give rise to primary tissues which are collectively called the primary plant body • Apical meristems composed of delicate cells that need protection – Root cap protects root apical meristem – Leaf primordia protect shoot apical meristem 10 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Young leaf primordium Shoot apical meristem Older leaf primordium Lateral bud primordium 100 µm dermal tissue ground tissue vascular tissue Root apical meristem Root cap 400 µm 11 (top left, right): © Dr. Robert Lyndon; (bottom left, right): © Biodisc/Visuals Unlimited • Apical meristem gives rise to the three tissue systems by first initiating primary meristems – 3 primary meristems • Protoderm – forms epidermis • Procambrium – produces primary vascular tissue • Ground meristem – differentiates into ground tissue – Some plants have intercalary meristems • Arise in stem internode • Add to internode length 12 • Lateral meristems – Found in plants that exhibit secondary growth – Give rise to secondary tissues which are collectively called the secondary plant body – Woody plants have two types • Cork cambium produces outer bark • Vascular cambium produces secondary vascular tissue – Secondary xylem is the main component of wood 13 14 Plant Tissues • Three main types of tissue – Dermal • On external surfaces that serves a protective function – Ground • Forms several different internal tissue types and can participate in photosynthesis, serve a storage function, or provide structural support – Vascular • Conducts water and nutrients 15 Dermal Tissue • Forms the epidermis • One cell layer thick in most plants • Forms the outer protective covering of the plant • Covered with a fatty cutin layer constituting the cuticle • Contains special cells, including guard cells, trichomes, and root hairs 16 • Guard cells – Paired sausage-shaped cells – Flank a stoma – epidermal opening • Passageway for oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water vapor – Stomatal patterning genes reveal a coordinated network of cell–cell communication that informs cells of their positions relative to other cells and determines cell fate 17 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Stomata Guard cells Epidermal cell a. 4 µm c. 200 µm Stoma Epidermal cell Guard cells b. 71 µm a: © Brian Sullivan/Visuals Unlimited; b-c: © EM Unit, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey 18 • Trichomes – Cellular or multicellular hairlike outgrowths of the epidermis – Keep leaf surfaces cool and reduce evaporation by covering stomatal openings – Some are glandular, secreting substances that deter herbivory 19 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Trichome cell 1. Trichome a. Trichomepromoting proteins, including GL3 Trichomeinhibiting proteins Activation 3.5 mm 2. Trichome initiation ON Inhibition Trichome develops Trichome will not develop 3. Trichome initiation OFF Neighboring cell b. 3.5 mm c. a-b: Courtesy of Allan Lloyd 20 • Roots hairs – Tubular extensions of individual epidermal cells – Greatly increase the root’s surface area and efficiency of absorption – Should not be confused with lateral roots 21 Ground Tissue • 3 cell types • Parenchyma – Function in storage, photosynthesis, and secretion • Collenchyma – Provide support and protection • Sclerenchyma – Provide support and protection 22 • Parenchyma cells – Most common type of plant cell – Living protoplasts – may live many years – Function in storage, photosynthesis, and secretion – Less specialized than other plant cells • Collenchyma cells – Provide support for plant organs – Allow bending without breaking – Living protoplasts – may live many years 23 24 • Sclerenchyma cells – Tough thick walls – Usually lack living protoplasts at maturity – Secondary cell walls often contain lignin – Two general types – both strengthen tissues • Fibers – long, slender cells that are usually grouped in strands • Sclereids – variable shape, often branched, may occur singly or in groups 25 Vascular Tissue • Xylem – Principal water-conducting tissue – Vessels • Continuous tubes of dead cylindrical cells arranged end-to-end – Tracheids • Dead cells that taper at the end and overlap one another – Vessel members tend to be shorter and wider than tracheids 26 27 • Xylem – Also conducts inorganic ions such as nitrates, and supports the plant body – Transpiration – diffusion of water vapor from plant – In addition to conducting cells, xylem typically includes fibers and parenchyma cells (ground tissue cells) 28 • Phloem – Principal food-conducting tissue in vascular plants – Contains two types of elongated cells • Sieve cells (seedless vascular plants and gymnosperms) and sieve tube members (angiosperms) • Living cells that contain clusters of pores called sieve areas or sieve plates • Sieve-tube members are more specialized (more efficient) – Associated with companion cells 29 30 Roots • Simpler pattern of organization and development than stems • Four regions are commonly recognized: – Root cap – Zone of cell division – Zone of elongation – Zone of maturation Boundaries not clearly defined 31 32 • Root cap – No equivalent in stems – Contains two types of cells that are formed continuously by the root apical meristem • Columella cells – inner • Root cap cells – outer and lateral – Functions mainly in protection of the delicate tissues behind it – Also in the perception of gravity 33 • Zone of cell division – Derived from rapid divisions of the root apical meristem – Contains mostly cuboidal cells, with small vacuoles and large central nuclei • Daughter cells of apical meristem – Apical meristem daughter cells soon subdivide into the three primary tissues • Protoderm, procambium, and ground meristem 34 • Zone of cell division – Patterning of these tissues begins in this zone – WEREWOLF (WER) gene • Suppresses root hair development – SCARECROW (SCR) gene • Necessary for differentiation of endodermal and ground cells 35 36 37 • Zone of elongation – Roots lengthen because cells become several times longer than wide – Width also increases slightly – No further increase occurs above this zone – Mature parts of the root, except for increasing in girth, remain stationary for the life of the plant 38 • Zone of maturation – Elongated cells become differentiated into specific cell types – Root surface cells become epidermal cells • Have very thin cuticle • Include root hair and nonhair cells – Parenchyma cells produced by cortex (ground meristem) • Inner boundary becomes endodermis – Casparian strips • Stele – tissues interior to endodermis – Pericycle 39 40 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Phloem Casparian strip Xylem Cortex H2O Pericycle H2O Endodermal cell Epidermis Cortex Monocot Endodermis Location of Casparian strip Primary phloem Pericycle Primary xylem Pith 1250 µm 385 µm Endodermis Location of Casparian strip Primary xylem Eudicot Endodermis Cortex Primary phloem Epidermis Pericycle 48 µm 41 8 µm (top left): © Carolina Biological Supply Company/Phototake; (top right): Photo by George S. Ellmore; (bottom left): © Lee W. Wilcox; (bottom right): Photo by George S. Ellmore Stages in the differentiation of plant tissues 42 Modified Roots • Most plants produce either/or: – Taproot system – single large root with small branch roots – Fibrous root system – many small roots of similar diameter – Some plants, however, produce modified roots with specific functions – Adventitious roots arise from any place other than the plant’s root 43 Modified Roots • • • • • • • • Prop roots: Keep the plant upright Aerial roots: Obtain water from the air Pneumatophores: Facilitate oxygen uptake Contractile roots: Pull plant deeper into soil Parasitic roots: Penetrate host plants Food storage roots: Store carbohydrates Water storage roots: Weigh 50 kg or more Buttress roots: Provide considerable stability 44 Prop roots Aerial roots 45 Pneumatophores Water storage roots 46 Buttress roots 47 Stems • Like roots, stems contain the three types of plant tissue • Also undergo growth from cell division in apical and lateral stems • Shoot apical meristem initiates stem tissue and intermittently produces primordia – Develop into leaves, other shoots, and even flowers 48 49 • Leaves may be arranged in one of three ways 50 • • • • • • Node – point of attachment of leaf to stem Internode – area of stem between two nodes Blade – flattened part of leaf Petiole – stalk of leaf Axil – angle between petiole/blade and stem Axillary bud – develops into branches with leaves or may form flowers • Terminal bud – extends the shoot system during the growing season 51 52 • Major distinguishing feature between monocot and eudicot stems is the organization of the vascular tissue system – Monocot vascular bundles are usually scattered throughout ground tissue system – Eudicot vascular tissue is arranged in a ring with internal ground tissue (pith) and external ground tissue (cortex) 53 Eudicot Monocot 54 • Vascular tissue arrangement is directly related to the stem’s ability for secondary growth – In eudicots, a vascular cambium develops between the primary xylem and phloem • Connects the ring of primary vascular bundles – In monocots, there is no vascular cambium – no secondary growth 55 56 57 • Rings in the stump of a tree reveal annual patterns of vascular cambium growth – Cell size depends on growth conditions – In woody eudicots and gymnosperms, the cork cambium arises in the outer cortex • Produces boxlike cork cells on outside and parenchyma-like phelloderm cells on inside • Collectively called the periderm 58 Internal Stem Structure 59 • Periderm – cork cambium, cork, and phelloderm – Forms outer bark 60 • Lenticels – Cork cambium produces unsuberized cells that permit gas exchange to continue 61 • Bulbs – swollen underground stems, consisting of fleshy leaves • Corms – superficially resemble bulbs, but have no fleshy leaves • Rhizomes – horizontal underground 62 stems, with adventitious roots • Runners and stolons – horizontal stems with long internodes that grow along the surface of the ground 63 • Tubers – swollen tips of rhizomes that contain carbohydrates • Tendrils – twine around supports and aid in climbing • Cladophylls – flattened photosynthetic stems resembling leaves 64 Leaves • Initiated as primordia by the apical meristems • Principal site of photosynthesis • Expand by cell enlargement and cell division • Determinate in structure – growth stops at maturity • Different patterns adaptive in different environments 65 • 2 different morphological groups – Microphyll • Leaf with one vein branching from the vascular cylinder of the stem and not extending the full length of the leaf • Phylum Lycophyta – Megaphylls • Several to many veins • Most plants 66 • Most eudicot leaves have a flattened petiole • Slender stalk called petiole • Leaf flattening increases photosynthetic surface • Flattening of the leaf blade reflects a shift from radial symmetry to dorsal–ventral (top–bottom) symmetry 67 68 • Leave may have stipules – Outgrowths at base of petiole – May be leaf-forming or modified as spines • Veins – Vascular bundles in leaves – main veins are parallel in most monocot leaves – Veins of eudicots form an often intricate network 69 • Simple leaves contain undivided blades – May have teeth, indentations, or lobes • Compound leaves have blades that are divided into leaflets 70 • The leaf’s surface is covered by transparent epidermal cells – Most have no chloroplasts • Epidermis has a waxy cuticle – Different types of glands and trichomes may be present • Lower epidermis contains numerous stomata flanked by guard cells 71 72 • Most eudicot leaves have 2 types of mesophyll – Palisade mesophyll – usually two rows of tightly packed chlorenchyma cells – Spongy mesophyll – loosely arranged cells with many air spaces in between • Function in gas exchange and water vapor exit • Monocot leaves – mesophyll is usually not differentiated into palisade/spongy layers 73 74 75 Modified Leaves • Floral leaves (bracts) – surround true flowers and behave as showy petals • Spines – reduce water loss and may deter predators • Reproductive leaves – plantlets capable of growing independently into full-sized plant • Window leaves – succulent, cone-shaped leaves that allow photosynthesis underground 76 • Shade leaves – larger in surface area but with less mesophyll than sun-lit leaves • Insectivorous leaves – trap insects – Pitcher plants have cone-shaped leaves that accumulate rainwater – Sundews have glands that secrete sticky mucilage – Venus flytrap have hinged leaves that snap shut 77