Types of Plant cells
Introduction
Plants
are living organisms, so like any other organism on the planet, we know that
they must be made of cells.
And more
importantly, plants are rather large multicellular organisms, so we should say plants
are multicellular eukaryotes. They are made specifically of eukaryotic cells,
just as all multicellular organisms are.
As we learned in the biology series, eukaryotic cells have a variety of organelles inside, and most of
these organelles are quite similar whether the cells belong to plants or animals. But we can identify plant cells very easily under a microscope because they have a few key differences.
These
would include the presence of chloroplasts, a central vacuole, and a cell wall,
all of which are structures that are absent in animal cells. If you need to
review general information about plant cells, visit my biology tutorial on the
subject now, as well as the one on animal cells, if you’re rusty on organelle function
and organization.
Now,
with the basics regarding plant cell structure understood, we need to get more
specific.
With
animals such as ourselves, we have all kinds of different cell types that allow
for the wide variety of organs and tissues in our bodies, as we learned in our
study of human anatomy and physiology.
Plants
are precisely the same way, in that not all the cells in a plant are exactly
the same.
We can
verify this just by looking at a tree.
The
roots, trunk, branches, and leaves are all made out of cells, but those cells
look very different under a microscope and they have very different jobs, just
like our own different cell types are different in appearance nerve cells look
very different from muscle cells, which look very different from skin cells,
and so forth.
Let’s
name the different types of plant cells and describe them now.
First,
there are the cells that plants use to grow.
These
are called meristematic cells, and they’re very much like the stem cells
we have in our own bodies.
meristematic cells are undifferentiated
What this means is that meristematic cells are undifferentiated, or without a specific job assigned to them when they are first created through mitosis.
So when
meristematic cells divide and replicate, they can produce daughter cells
belonging to any other kind of plant cell.
The
important difference between meristematic cells in plants and stem cells in
animals is that meristematic cells don’t get used up, so they can continue
dividing and helping the plant grow indefinitely.
Meristematic
cells can be found in the tips of the roots, which are the parts of a plant that
grow down into the soil, and in the tips of the shoots, which are the parts of
a plant that grow up into the air.
This
means meristematic cells allow the roots of a plant to grow deeper into the
soil and the branches of a plant to grow taller into the air.
More
specifically, they can be present in the apical or farthest position at the
tips of roots and shoots, the lateral or side position within the vascular or
transportation tissues of the plant, or in the intercalary position where
branches intersect and where leaves attach
to branches.
they’re a sort of general-use cell.
Parenchyma
cells are responsible for most of the photosynthesis that occurs, but they also
do most of the energy and nutrient storage for the plant, as well as much of
the nutrient transport.
These
cells have thin walls, no specialized structure, and come in a variety of
shapes to support their diverse functions.
In leaves, parenchyma cells form the two
layers of mesophyll where photosynthesis and gas Parenchyma Cells exchange take
place.
In roots
and seeds, parenchyma cells are responsible for storing starch, fat, and water.
Parenchyma
cells also make up most of the structure of a fruit, and they create new structures
to heal areas where a plant has been wounded.
Collenchyma
cells
are the third type of plant cell, and they’re
a kind of back-up system for the plant.
These
cells can contribute to photosynthesis and nutrient storage. But the most
important job for collenchyma cells is providing flexible structure to the
plant.
Collenchyma
are long cells that have thickened cell walls, meaning that when they’re in a
group they act to make that part of the plant stiffer.
In fact,
the “strings” in celery are collenchyma cells. Groups of collenchyma cells can
keep leaves from tearing, allow petioles, which are the little stems on the
ends of leaves, to bend and flex in the breeze, and essentially give the plant
some room to stretch without breaking.
What’s
really amazing is that plants which experience a lot of bending due to wind, or
collenchyma cells have a variable thickness even artificial disturbance from a
scientific researcher, have collenchyma cells that can be up to twice as thick
as normal.
Even
though collenchyma cells are pretty stiff in their structure, they’re also very
flexible and able to grow and change as the plant grows.
However,
collenchyma cells don’t last forever.
In woody
plants, the collenchyma cells are only needed to do their job of stiffening and
strengthening the plant until the sclerenchyma cells take over.
The
final type of plant cell, as we just mentioned, are the sclerenchyma, and these
are a little different from the first three.
Though sclerenchyma
also have thickened cell walls like the collenchyma, the real difference is
that sclerenchyma cells are dead and found in parts of the plant that are no
longer growing.
Sclerenchyma
Cells
These
sclerenchyma cells provide the most support for the plant by creating woody
tissue in stems and trunks.
Sclerenchyma
cell walls contain lots of cellulose and lignin, which are both complex
biopolymers */that are difficult to break down, so they last a long time.
These structural cells can be arranged in two basic ways.
Sclerenchyma
fibers are stretched lengthwise in a plant stem and provide most of a plant’s
support.
These
fibers are also what people use to make rope and fabric out of plants, such as
flax, jute, and hemp.
The
other group of sclerenchyma cells are the sclereids, and they’re much more
versatile.
These
sclereid cells are what make up the shells of nuts, the hard coatings of seeds like
those found in peaches and plums, and many other hardened structures in a
plant.
So now we know about the four types of plant cells, those being meristematic, parenchyma, types of plant cells collenchyma, and sclerenchyma.
But cells don’t really function individually inside a plant.
Instead,
they clump together to form tissues with different jobs.
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