BIOL 412 — Lecture (Unit 1)
concept of plant blindness
plants carry importance via
- agriculture/consumption
- basis of all food chains → primary producers
 - primary producers photosynthesize solar heat/energy into chemical energy as sugar
 - primary producers include many algae and bacteria
 
 - sheltering (material culture)
- shelter via wood
 - generally things are made out of materials derived from wood or other plants
 
 - medicinal
- plant-based medicines (aspirin originated from willow plants)
 - different chemicals used than those in food/consumption (sugar, starch, proteins vs.)
 - consumption chemicals are primary chemicals
 - medicine, toxins, and flavors are secondary chemicals and not part of major biosynthetic pathways
- cinnamons, basil compounds
 
 
 - ecosystem services: purification, water estuaries, erosion prevention, etc.
- services which provide a monetary/chargeable value
 - global warming and prevention of global warming
- use of carbon dioxide in photosynthesis and removing it from the overall ecosystem
 
 
 
phylogenetic review
- plants and algae are primary producers; fungi are decomposers
 - monophyletic groups/clades
 - biological classification system:
- domain
 - kingdom
 - phylum
 - class
 - order
 - family
 - genus
 - species
 
 - maintained due to some reasons such as endangered species act (unable to remove the species definition)
 - species: an evolutionary lineage/line
- biological species definition: a species is reproductively isolated and only is able to reproduce with its species and not other groups/species
 - plants falter under the biological species definition; plants can often produce fertile hybrid offspring (vs. sterile hybrid offspring in animals)
- hybrid swarms can occur
 - hybrids can back-breed
 
 - bacteria cannot breed sexually
 - main definition is on an evolutionary line; vaguer definition here
 
 
land plants
- four informal groups of land plants
 - overarching plant groups: nonvascular and vascular plants
- non-vascular: bryophytes
- liverworts, mosses, hornworts
 
 - vascular has two subgroups
- seedless vascular plants
- lycophtes (club mosses, spikemosses, quillworts)
 - monilophytes (ferns, horsetails, whisk ferns)
 
 - seeded plants
- gymnosperms and angiosperms
 - angiosperms are flowering plants and the most familiar often
 
 
 - seedless vascular plants
 
 - non-vascular: bryophytes
 - non-vascular plants are tiny and lack vascular tissues (“plumbing systems”, veins, water/sugar/mineral transport systems)
- limited and small
 - live in wet areas; sperm must flow through water and moist areas (flagella)
 
 - seedless vascular plants have a water transport system but do not reproduce via seeds
- reproduce using spores
 - live in wet areas; sperm must flow through water and moist areas (flagella)
 
 - seed plants do not need to be restricted to moist/wet areas
- seeds have embryos and sperm + food package and covering
 - seeds lack flagella and do not need to swim
 - often evolutionary advantageous
 
 - gymnosperms: “naked seed plants”
- gymno- refers to “being naked”
 - seeds are not enclosed in fruit or larger coverings; seeds are exposed
 
 - angiosperms: flowering plants
- angio- refers to “container”
 - fruit is the vessel/container
 - both flowers and seeds are present in fruits
 
 
angiosperm morphology
- flowering plant form
 - morphology is the study of form
 
non-reproductive morphology
- composed of 3 primary plant organs
 - roots usually grounded/underground
- forms a root system to absorb water and minerals
- including common nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, calcium
 
 - anchors the plant and keeps it in place
 
 - forms a root system to absorb water and minerals
 - above-ground organs include leaves and stems
 - leaves have two specific components
- blade: flat, expansive section
 - petiole: thin, skinny “stem”
 - primarily used in photosynthesis
 
 - stems
- hold up leaves and often make leaves or part of what we think makes up leaves
 - several regions
- leaves attach at the stem nodes
 - internodes are sections between nodes/leaf nodes
 
 
 - leaves and stems make up the shoot system
- the end of the plant opposite of the roots: “shoot tip” or “terminal bud”
 - axil: the angle of the region between a leaf and the stem
 - axillary/apical bud: the bud structure present at the axil
- growing points with a specific arrangement
 
 
 - simple vs compound leaves
- depends on the subdivision of the blade into leaflets
 - in both there is not the presence of multiple axillary buds; only at the base of the leaf
 
 - phenotypic/developmental plasticity
- leaves may differ in form due to their environment, temperature, function, amount of sunlight received, etc. even though they have the same genes
 - organs may be modified (onion leaves/stems)
 
 - stems are necessary organs for the plant
- stems can be green, photosynthetic, underground, etc.
 - not the normal function, but is possible
 
 
meristems
- a group of cells usually undifferentiated (or deemed separate types of cells) that can perform cell division
 - equivalent of stem cells; no stem cells in plants
 - growing regions of plants
 - two kinds of meristems
- apical meristems are always present; must exist for a plant to exist
- exists in all buds, root tips
 - lengthen plants; increase height/depth
 - tissue formed is primary tissue or the primary plant body
 
 - lateral meristem are not always present, but optional; two subtypes
- cylindrical, not pointed
 - occur on the sides of the plant
 - create secondary tissues or a secondary plant body
 - widen the plant; diameter
 - found in large trees
 - many types of plants, such as wood, cork, etc.
 - woody plants are hard due to wood tissue
 
 
 - apical meristems are always present; must exist for a plant to exist
 - dome of undifferentiated cells underneath horns
 
common terms
- herb: any non-woody plant
 - wood: tissue that transports water and minerals up and down plant
- xylem tissue
 - secondary
 
 - woody plants include trees and shrubs
- trees have one main stem (the trunk) and are usually larger than shrubs
 - shrubs have several main stems rather than one big stem; shrub stems branch out from one group/point
 
 
growth in plants vs. animals
- meristems cause indeterminate growth
 - indeterminate: no fixed size; infinite growth only limited by resources/supplies
 - animal growth is determinate; fixed by number of stem cells
 - differences in growth form
- animals have fixed amounts of growth; unitary body plans (some exceptions)
 - plants have modulary body plans; indeterminate
 
 
reproductive physiology
flowers
- modified determinate shoot stems and leaves
 - modified via evolution
 - four flower parts: sepals, petals, stamen, pistil
 - sepal: lowest node, usually multiple (3+) on one node
- protects flower whilst in the bud
 
 - petal: usually colored to attract pollinators, but not always; also usually large
- exist in wind pollination plants, but less showy
 
 - stamen: produces pollen grains which carry sperm
- the top part usually produces → ??? ; lower stem is filament
 
 - pistil: sexual organs
- carpels are modified leaves which make up the pistil; fused together
 - ovary on top of the carpels; produces ovules which carry eggs
 - long connecting part called the style
 - stigma is sticky/feathery; catches pollen grains
- pollen grains grow a long tube through the style into the ovary in attempt to cause fertilization
 
 
 - fertilized zygotes develop into embryos; ovules grow into seeds
 
monocot/eudicot
- eu- → “true”; revision of dicot polyphyletic clade
 - primary classes
 - named by the number of cotyledons (seed leaves)
- cotyledon: a leaf on the embryo of the seed
 - monocots have one cotyledon, eudicots have two
 
 - can also be differentiated by veins
- monocot veins are parallel, eudicots are netted; very small, usually noticed more under light
 
 - different organizations of stem/shoot vascular tissue
- complex arrangement of monocots
 - eudicot tissue arranged in a ring
 
 - different root systems
- monocots have a fibrous root system
 - eudicots have a taproot system; one tap root and lateral roots
 
 - different numbers of flower parts; standardize across clades
- monocots: in threes
 - eudicots: in fours or fives
 
 
plant cells
- plastids: bound by 2 membranes outside
- chloroplasts: 4-6 um in diameter
- perform photosynthesis
 - disc-shaped, but are able to change shapes and orientation with regard to the cell membrane
 - thylakoid membrane sacs interconnected and stacked
 - granum/grana stack in thylakoid
 - stroma fluid
 - semi-autonomous; able to divide via binary fission, have nucleoid with several copies of chromosome, and regulated via dual control
 
 - chromoplast: a colored, but non-green plastid
- usually yellow, orange, or red → carotenoids
 - carotenoids are fat soluble, not water soluble; stored in the thylakoids
 - found in fruits mostly, also flowers
 
 - leukoplasts: white/clear plastids
- store starch or oil
 
 - amyloplasts: clear plastids
- store starch
 
 - all plastids are developmentally related to each other
- all plastids start out as proplastids then differentiate
 - chloroplasts aboveground, chromoplast belowground, etc.
 - mature chloroplasts can convert to chromoplasts and vice versa
 
 
 - chloroplasts: 4-6 um in diameter
 - central vacuole
- bound by one membrane: tonoplast
 - large; small vacuoles merge into one central vacuole which occupies up to 95% cell volume
 - contains cell sap made of water, sugars, ions, salts, water-soluble pigments, toxins, enzymes, etc.; many solutes
 - many functions; perform enzymatic/digestive role instead of lysosomes (subsume in central vacuole and digest)
- store pigments as long as they are water-soluble; anthocyanins (red, blue, “nice flower colors”)
 - store toxins; avoids keeping it in cytosol and damaging organelles
 - stores crystals; sometimes toxins crystallize due to volume
 - facilitate growth; maintain turgor/water pressure
- keeps erect/rigidity of cell walls
 
 
 
 
cell walls
- cell walls: in the apoplast
- protoplast: the cell membrane and structures inside the membrane
- aka symplast
 
 - apoplast: all sections outside the cell membrane: cell walls, spaces between the cells, and spaces inside dead cells
 - share an extracellular matrix like animal cells; may be more rigid/supportive
 - different functions: helps maintain shape and turgor pressure
- protects from predators and viruses
 - many allow transport through the cell wall
 - enzymes are embedded in cell wall
 
 - several layers of the cell wall
 
 - protoplast: the cell membrane and structures inside the membrane
 - a minimum of two layers
- middle lamella: a glue-like more outermost layer
- lamella → “layer”
 - hydrophilic
 - made from pectins
- causes the structure of jams/jellies
 - pectin makes cells stick together
 - hydrophilic
 
 - made of polysaccharides; no cellulose
 
 - primary cell wall: a layer within the middle lamella
- not rigid, but contains cellulose
 - specific arrangement of cellulose
 - composed in a matrix which includes other materials; cellulose is embedded in the matrix
- cellulose: beta glucose subunits (the hydroxyl on the first unit of the ring is parallel to the ch2oh unit)
- beta glucose subunits are attached together while hydroxyl-ch2oh parallels are opposite of the adjacent units
 - linear repeating chain; not coiled; strong; composed of 1000s of beta glucose units
 - glucose molecule
 - not the basis of the cell wall alone; large amounts exist in parallel and form hydrogen bonds between themselves creating a cellulose molecule “cable”
- cables form cellulose microfibrils; basis of the cell wall
 
 
 - matrix has two main components: pectins (polysaccharides) and hemicellulose
- both are polysaccharides
 - both are hydrophilic
 - water will go through the primary cell wall and the middle lamella without transport channel usage
 - pectins form a mesh/net; some but irregular hydrogen bonding between pectins
 - hemicellulose crosslinks; tethers together cellulose microfibrils by forming hydrogen bonds across one length of a microfibril then traveling across to form bonds to the other microfibril
- always runs parallel to the cellulose microfibrils
 
 - proposed correct layout
 - glycoproteins, waterproofing materials, lignin can all also be in the matrix, but are not necessary
 
 
 - cellulose: beta glucose subunits (the hydroxyl on the first unit of the ring is parallel to the ch2oh unit)
 
 - additional cell walls are further in
 - secondary cell wall is within the primary cell wall
- can be much thicker than previous two layers
 - often when a cell has deposited this, it will die
 - rigid, hydrophobic wall; needs channels for transport
 - cellulose microfibrils; several parallel layers arranged in different orientations; cross-netting
 - matrix made of many materials: hemicellulose, lignin
- lignin is a phenolic polymer which reinforces the rigidity/hydrophobic properties of the secondary cell wall
- aromatic ring with a hydroxyl; no repeated linkage between lignin
 
 
 - lignin is a phenolic polymer which reinforces the rigidity/hydrophobic properties of the secondary cell wall
 - secondary cell wall prevents growth
 
 
 - middle lamella: a glue-like more outermost layer
 - cellulose microfibrils are particularly arranged in order to facilitate cell expansion
- microfibrils cannot be stretched; hemicellulose crosslinks must be broken and turgor pressure will expand microfibrils and cells within
 - elongation; more microfibrils can be created afterwards
 - in random arrangement, cells expand in all random directions
 
 
plasmodesmata
- plasmodesma: a cytoplasmatic connection between two cells that facilitates communication
 - lumen: the inside of the cell
 - cell membrane between neighboring cells is continuous
 - endoplasmic reticulum has a portion of the reticulum form a membrane channel and connect into and through the neighboring cell
- inner tubule is the desmotubule
 
 - channels are very small
 - grouped into a primary pit field: group of plasmodesmata
 
pits
- areas that lack the secondary cell wall after it has been deposited; a hole in the secondary cell wall
 - pits occupy a primary pit field; avoids blocking off primary pit fields immediately
 - created after a cell membrane has usually died off
 
cell types, tissues, and tissue systems
- cell: basic unit of life
 - tissue: a group of cells which forms a structural unit
 - simple tissue: 1 cell type; complex: 2+
 - tissue system: a group of tissues which form a structural unit
 - three tissue systems in vascular plants
- dermal tissue system: the external outer covering
- epidermis tissue in primary growth
 - in herbs, one single continuous tissue represents the epidermis tissue
 - covers everything except meristems
 
 - vascular tissue system
- xylem transport system (for water and minerals)
 - phloem transport system (for sugars produced by photosynthesis)
 - veins in stem and root
 
 - ground tissue system
- a tissue system between the vascular and dermal tissue
 - everything else not in the dermal and vascular tissue system
 
 
 - dermal tissue system: the external outer covering
 
dermal tissue system
epidermis tissue in primary growth
- represented as a continuous layer on both above and underground growth
 - does not represent the meristems
 - functions vary on location of epidermis tissue
- common function: protection against viruses and bacterial infection
 - protects against water loss above ground (waxes)
 - allows permeability for water underground
 - photosynthesis is not a function of epidermis (production of sugars)
 
 - complex tissue with differences between monocots and eudicots
- monocot stem: cells are arranged in linear, staggered rows; normal epidermal cells
- these resemble typical ones drawn from an elodea leaf
 - no air space between monocot cells
 
 - eudicot stem: puzzle piece, freeform
- no air space between eudicot cells
 - normal epidermal cells
 
 - both of the above cells are aboveground normal epidermal cells; only one type
- both are covered by cuticle layer made from cutin and wax
 - ridged cuticle which prevents water loss
 
 - another type: guard cells
- always occur in pairs
 - may be covered with pores
 - 2 guard cells and a pore form a stoma
- pore allows for gas exchange
 
 - if no pore exists between guard cells, gas exchange is prohibited
 - guard cells are more elongated in monocots than eudicots, but they perform the same functions
 - guard cells are surrounded by normal epidermal cells
 - only epidermal tissue cell which has chloroplasts
- make sugars, but are used to control stomata openings
 
 - much smaller than normal cells
 
 - another type: trichomes
- a type of hair for plant cells
 - various appearances and various functions
- water vessels, hairs, branched hairs, scales, etc.
 - unicellular – papillae, water vesicles, hairs
 - multicellular – hairs, branches, pelltate scales, glands
 
 - may be much larger than guard and normal, especially if protective
 
 - another type: glandular cells
- secrete material, usually a protective material (insect repellent)
 - typically a type of trichome, so these are actually often glandular trichomes
 - flatter, sac-like trichomes
 
 - another type: subsidiary cells
- adjacent to guard cells and aid function of guard cells
 
 
 - monocot stem: cells are arranged in linear, staggered rows; normal epidermal cells
 - single layer of cells
 
vascular tissue system
- vascular bundles surrounded by the ground tissues
 - ring shape around the stem center
 
xylem
- complex tissue which transports water and minerals
 - three cell types: water-conducting cells, parenchyma, sclerenchyma fibers
 - xylem water-conducting cells last for many years due to secondary cell walls
 - water conducting cells: dead, hollowed-out, elongate cells; thick walls (2* cw), with easy flow through cell for water
- two types of wcc found in angiosperms, and can be found either in any angiosperms
- most gymnosperms and non-vascular plants only have tracheids
 
 - tracheids and vessel elements
 - water mostly moves up the plant (sometimes lateral)
 - begin as live cells; end walls are degraded, removing organelles and primary cell wall
 
 - two types of wcc found in angiosperms, and can be found either in any angiosperms
 - tracheids: long, thin cells which taper at the ends
- several pits across the elongate
 - in tracheids, water zig-zags through the pits of each cell; pit pairs line up to connect between tracheids
 - “pit membrane” between the pit pairs: actually the primary cell wall and middle lamella sandwiched and thinned down between the tracheids
 - pit membranes prevent embolisms from traveling through conduits/pits and destroying tracheids like vessels
 
 - vessel elements
- stacks form a vessel; a pipe that carries the water; 30-50 stacked, sometimes as small as 2 stacked
 - shorter and wider than tracheids
 - pits found on the lateral walls, the side walls, and the end walls; no tapering
 - end walls have openings/perforations: perforation plate
- large, flat or slanted opening that goes through all of the wall layers; water enters through the middle
 - perforation plate may have several smaller openings surrounded by wall material, creating possible resistance; grate-like
 - one large hole: simple perforation plate
 - grate: compound perforation plate
 
 - simple perforation plates are more efficient than compound perforation plate; both are more efficient than tracheids
 - possible to have massive embolisms: vessels are wholly destroyed
 
 - above found in secondary xylem: lateral meristems and non-elongate, fully mature primary xylem; full complete rigid secondary walls
 
primary xylem
- protoxylem and metaxylem
 - both are for immature, elongate cells
 - protoxylem is the earliest xylem found in maturing plants/xylem
- very stretchable
 - will have rings of secondary cell wall or helices (helix/spiral)
 - when protoxylem stretches, more space between cell wall, but does not rupture
 
 - metaxylem occurs later
- network/reticulum of intersecting cell wall as added
 - or complete 2 cell wall with pits and possibly perforations
 - less stretchable; still alive
 
 
phloem
- “information highway”; transfers sugars, rna, and some hormones in any direction across the plant
 - contents are placed under positive pressure; rupture would emit materials
 - complex tissue
- sieve-tube elements
- only one sugar-conducting cell type is seen in angiosperms
 
 - companion cells
 - parenchyma
 - sclerenchyma fibers
 
 - sieve-tube elements
 - sieve tube elements
- alive when functioning even though they have protoplasts
 - no secondary walls; soft, only primary and middle lamella
 - can be damaged; last only 1 year on average
 - have pores: enlarged plasmodesmata
- used as connections between cells
 - connected/clustered in sieve areas
 - sides of walls/cells
 
 - very small cells
 - end walls → sieve plates
- have sieve walls on the end plates
 - flat walls contain simple sieve-plates with a single sieve area
 - slanted walls contain compound sieve-plates with multiple sieve areas
 
 - 30-40 stacked
 - may look like vessel elements in diagrams
 - stack on top of each other
 
 
callose
- polysaccharide made from glucose (beta 1-3 linkages vs. cellulose and starch)
 - lines the top and bottom of pores; doesnt overlap
 - stains blue, recognizable
 - definitive callose appears at the end of the cell’s life to block off full sieve plate preventing sugar from falling out
 - wound callose eventually becomes definitive
 
p-proteins
- only in eudicots
 - p-protein bodies; distinctive bodies in the cytoplasm
 - hydrate to become slime; gooey, hydrated
 - lines side of elements
 - quick response for cell wounds/damage
 - slime plug
 
modified protoplasm
- no tonoplast; no central vacuole to impede movement
- no cytoskeleton, no nucleus, no ribosomes
 - contents of sieve tube elements can go through room in center easily
 - remaining tonoplast lines edges of cells, such as er
 - some mitochondria in cell
 
 
companion cells
- developmentally related to sieve tube elements; elements are paired with companion cells
 - mother cell unequally divides into sieve tube element and a small companion cell sliver cut off from mother cell
 - aids in metabolism; many more mitochondria and ribosomes in companion cells to aid
 - especially helps put sugars into sieve tube elements: “phloem loading”
 - soft tissue, easily damaged
 
ground tissue system
- everything inside and around the vascular tissue system
 - center region of stem: “pith” region
 - outer region between epidermis and vascular ring: “cortex” region
 - intervals in vascular region: “pith ray” region
 - ground tissue system is in these regions and others
 - involves 3 simple tissues
 
parenchyma tissue
- singular cell type: parenchyma cells
 - ubiquitous with the exception of the epidermis
 - most common tissue in a plant
 - all cells in parenchyma are alive
 - majority of parenchyma cells are isodiametric: cubical in nature, but not necessarily square
- some are elongated/long and thin, but not all
 
 - only the primary cell wall and the middle lamella are present in parenchyma tissues
- thin cell wall
 
 - primarily functions for photosynthesis (found in leaves) or metabolism ie cell respiration (roots), storage, contributing to growth, reversion to meristematic state
- meristematic state: begins dividing again in order to repair wounds
 
 - air space between parenchyma cells; 25 um
- necessary for gas exchange
 
 - no chloroplasts; too deep within the leaf to pick up light
 
collenchyma
- found at the edges/periphery of organs; closer to but not necessarily next to the epidermis
 - found in bundles and layers
 - all cells in collenchyma are alive
 - collenchyma cells elongate over maturity
 - only the primary cell wall and the middle lamella are present in collenchyma tissues
- lots of pectin in the cell wall; may make it look glossy
 - some regions of the cell wall are thick, and some are thin; irregularly thickened
 - distinctive irregularity
- thick cell walls support the collenchyma
 
 
 - functions primarily to support growing regions; elongates/stretches as the organ grows and stretches
- not a lot of support, but is some support
 
 - known as the collenchyma strands found in celery strings
 
sclerenchyma
- found in many locations; its main locations vary
 - all cells in sclerenchyma are dead at maturity
 - 2 different cell shapes with specific names
- fibers: long and thin; very small, empty lumen surrounded by a thick cell wall; like a very bad straw/tube
- majority is secondary cell wall filled in, with a thin primary cell wall
 
 - sclereids: various shapes as long as not long and thin; star-shaped, spherical, etc.
- also have a small lumen and thick cell walls
 - shapes may be for protection (hurt to bite down on star-shaped)
 
 - cells have secondary cell walls, primary cell walls, and middle lamella
- lignin present; makes cells rigid and adds support
- regular, even thickness of cell walls 
 - fibers: long and thin; very small, empty lumen surrounded by a thick cell wall; like a very bad straw/tube
 
other notes
- transfer cells: a variation of parenchyma
- cell walls protrude in projections; cell membrane increases, so ability to transport increases
 
 - stone cells: a variation of sclereid schlerenchyma cells
- roughly spherical; sclerified secondary cell walls feel stone-like, gritty (seen in pears)
 - 5 um
 
 
development
- totipotency: all well; one cell, if treated via tissue culture, would be able to divide and form a full organism
- with parenchyma; could be done with collenchyma but would have to remove wall
 - vs. stem cells
 - genes for all different plant cells are present in the parenchyma cell
 
 - three overlapping processes; hard to distinguish
- growth: an increase in size
- cell division: mitosis → more cells → enlarge
 - cell enlargement: huge process in plants vs animals; plants have a central vacuole that makes it easier to enlarge by absorbing water vs. making large amounts of cytoplasm
 
 - morphogenesis
- generating a form
 - used to believe was mostly due to the plane of cell division’ anticlinal (perpendicular) cell division or periclinal (parallel)
- is important specifically when an uneven/asymmetrical division occurs
 - is important when generating plant polarity
 - is important in first zygotic cell division (plant polarity)
 
 - cell enlargement; enlarge parallel to organ
 
 - cell differentiation
- specialization
 - compare to animal cells; animal cells have cell lineages and develop into specific cells based on their precursor; plants develop based on relative position to the rest of the plant (and thus the hormones adjacent to it in the plant)
 - “pattern formation”
 - differential gene expression
 
 
 - growth: an increase in size
 - meristem cells are known as initials
- in first division, the plane matters; it forms an initial and derivative
 - in second division, plane is hopefully the same; one initial, three derivatives
 - meristems are not fully meristematic; as derivative cells divide, they lose the ability to divide and become progressively more differentiated; vs. the initial cell
- some cells may divide longer than others; gradual process
 
 - three primary meristems for each tissue system
- protoderm: surface level meristem; used for dermal tissue system
 - procambium: strands found inside the stem; vascular tissue system
 - ground meristem: ground tissue system
 
 
 - phase change: juvenile leaves differ from adult leaves
- flowers: flowers are modified determinate leaves
 
 - current hypothesis of flower phase change; switching from vegetative growth to flowering growth
- the meristem must change from a vegetative meristem to a floral meristem
- meristem identity genes produce transcription factors which change identity of meristem
 
 - abc hypothesis
- sepal > petal > stamen > carpel
 - three sets of genes: a, b, c genes
 - each set of genes is active in two roles/worlds
- a: sepal and petal
 - b: petal and stamen
 - c: stamen and carpel
 
 - the activity of genes and mutations in these genes affects what parts of the flowers are produced
- cultivated vs wild rose gene activity
 
 
 
 - the meristem must change from a vegetative meristem to a floral meristem
 
leaves
photorespiratory processes
- standard photosynthesis occurs in C3 plants: first product of carbon fixation is a 3 carbon molecule
 - in xeric environments, first product of carbon fixation is a 4 carbon molecule, disrupting calvin cycle
- c4 plants
 - cam plants
 
 - both c4 and cam have pep carboxylase (phophoenolpyruvate) which can only add co2 to pep; forms oxaloacetate (4c)
 - in non-hot temperatures, c3 plant does better
 - in darker/less intense light intensities, c3 plant does better
 - photorespiration occurs due to buildup of o2 while stomata is closed to prevent dehydration/death from remaining open in xeric environments
- rubp will catalyze with both co2 and o2; o2 will create one 3-phophoglycerate and one 2-phosphoglycolate which is broken down and released as co2
 
 
calvin cycle
- 400 to 500g h2o per gram of co2 for c3
- poor efficiency; tend to be in areas where water is abundant
 - high use of co2
 
 - light reaction: absorbs light, and water is split for electrons in electron transport chain; photosystems produce oxygen (o2) and atp and nadph in stroma
 - calvin cycle
- RuBisco catalyzes carbon fixation
- ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase
 - slow and large enzyme; common; huge amount of protein
 
 - 3Rubp → (3CO2) → 6PGA
- 3 rubp: ribulose bisphosphate
 - 3 co2 is fixated to 3rubp; forms unstable carbon molecules which form 6 3cs (3-phosphoglycerate/3pga)
 - fixation: adding inorganic carbon to organic molecule
 - PGA: 3C with a COOH, OH, CH2OP group
 
 - 6PGA → (6ATP) (6NADPH) → 6G3P
- G3P: Glyceraldehyde 3-Phosphate
- COH group instead of COOH
 
 - reduction; energy from sunlight added; G3P is the sugar createed
 - 1 g3p siphoned off for sugar production, starch, etc.
 
 - G3P: Glyceraldehyde 3-Phosphate
 - 5G3P → (3ATP) → 3RuBP
- regenerate RuBP
 
 
 - RuBisco catalyzes carbon fixation
 
c4 plants
- sugarcane, bermuda grass, zea mays, amaranthus, purslane
 - evolved at least 45 times and in 19 different families (3 monocot, 16 eudicot)
 - kranz anatomy: “wreath”; enlarged bundle sheath cells around the vein; puffy looking; altered chloroplast; and mesophyll cells are wrapped around bundle sheath
- initial carbon fixation occurs in the mesophyll cells
 - calvin cycle occurs in the bundle sheath cells
 - the processes are separated across location/spatially separate
 
 - mesophyll chloroplasts have large amounts of thylakoids (light reactions) and linear + cyclic electric flow → high oxygen flow; no rubisco
 - bundle sheath cell chloroplasts have low oxygen/airspace, have rubisco, and don’t have many thylakoids; thylakoids only have cyclic electric flow, so no rubisco made
 - in mesophyll: co2 is picked up with pep carboxylase enzyme → catalyzes addition to produce oxaloacetate 4c → converts into other 4cs (aspartate, malate)
 - in bundle: move to bundle, break off co2, and produce carbon cycle; co2 breakage forms pyruvate
 - move back to mesophyll: pyruvate is converted with atp to form phosphoenol pyruvate
 - uses more atp via this process
 - uses 250-300g h2o per gram of co2
 
cam plants
- initial carbon fixation occurs at night; calvin cycle occurs at day
 - agave, orchids, pineapples cacti and succulents; stonecrop, crassulaceae, kalanchoe
- orchids and agaves — monocots
 - very hot and dry environments; xeric
- opening stomata would dehydrate/kill
 
 
 - Crassulacean Acid Metabolism
- named after crassulaceae family (stonecrop/kalanchoe lilies)
 - stomata only open at night to collect co2; gas exchange
 - pep carboxylase in cytosol catalyzes co2 to pep forming 4c oxaloacetate
 - converts to malic acid and stored in central vacuole; accumulated overnight
- sour in morning; high acidity
 
 - stomata close in day
 - malic acid is taken out of vacuole, co2 broken off and produces calvin cycle sugars
- light rxns only in day
 
 - pyruvate forms; use atp to convert into phosphoenol pyruvate
 
 - uses 50-100g h2o per gram of co2
 
sun vs. shade leaves in c3
- phenotypic plasticity
 - how much sun is in location where leaf develops
 - thicker leaf is in sun, thinner in shade; even if they have same volume
 
roots
- primarily for anchoring and absorbing minerals
- modified sometimes
- storage (carrot taproots, manioc, sweet potato)
 - prop roots (corn) hold plant up
 - buttress roots
 - strangler fig roots; dispersed roots growing and sending roots down, surround main tree
 - pneumatophores: living cells, gas exchange (black mangroves)
 - aerial roots/epiphytic: epiphytic orchids; upwards/canopy roots
 
 
 - modified sometimes
 - anatomy of primary growth
- root cap protecting the apical meristem; produced by the apical meristem
- sheds over time/sloughs off
 - makes mucigel: hydrated polysaccharide; slimy; secretes into soil; creates a region of soil next to the root different from that further away — rhizosphere (rhizome)
- different bacteria, microbes
 
 - cell division zone
- quiescent zone in apical meristem
 - generates pattern; contributes cells to rest of root, but very slowly (~15 days)
 
 - cell elongation zone
 - cell maturation zone
- root hair: extension of one epidermal cell
- increases surface area for absorption
 - 70-90% of actual absorption
 - temporary; only lasts ~1 week and more root hairs are produced
 - root hairs necessary for specialization, but also because only place for root hair safely; avoids elongating cells destroying root; higher up is at branch roots
 
 
 - root hair: extension of one epidermal cell
 
 
 - root cap protecting the apical meristem; produced by the apical meristem
 - root has primary structures/tissues
- epidermis with a thin or no cuticle, root hairs, and no stomata
 - large, thick cortex
- standard normal parenchyma cells but also endodermis length
 - both part of cortex
 - ground meristems
 
 - vascular cinder/stele
- procambium
 - vascular tissue
 
 
 - endodermis
- screens what passes into the vascular cylinder/tissue
 - thickened/transverse/stained walls:
 - no air space between endodermis
 - casparian strip
- suberin: waterproof, lipid, fat
 - could also be lignin (phenolic)
 - anticlinal walls (perpendicular) fully permeated by casparian strip
 - binds to cell membrane
 - forces solutions to cross cell membrane to regulate vascular tissue
 
 - passage cells
 
 - different routes through endodermis
- apoplastic route: materials enter through cell wall and spaces in cell wall
 - symplastic: materials travel across membrane early and go through cytosol through cells
 - transmembrane: across cytosol and membrane of cells
 
 - vascular cylinder in eudicots
- pericycle: one layer of cells; parenchyma cells
- lateral roots originate in pericycle while meristematic and bridging out
 - secondary growth
 
 - move into primary phloem (outside) and primary xylem (inside)
- has protoxylem and metaxylem
- protoxylem: poles that radiate outward
 - metaxylem: everything else inside
 - number of protoxylem poles varies; 2 minimum; 2–~6
- can change over time/developmentally
 
 
 
 - has protoxylem and metaxylem
 - single layer of residual procambium between phloem and xylem if secondary growth is possible
 
 - pericycle: one layer of cells; parenchyma cells
 - vascular cylinder in monocots
- central pith; monocot stems don’t have a pith but roots do, vice versa on eudicots; pith instead of central metaxylem
 - primary xylem surrounds pith in uneven rows/poles
 - many protoxylem poles
 - metaxylem around pith
 - patches of primary phloem outside
 - one layer of pericycle
 
 - basic function diagram
- vertical transport, storage, connection to lateral roots
 - absorption
 - growth
 - tip of root
 
 - fungi mutualism and bacteria nodules