After the primary growth, lateral meristems develop as secondary plant growth. This growth adds to the plant in diameter from the established stem but not all plants exhibit secondary growth. There are two types of secondary meristems: the vascular cambium and the cork cambium. •
Vascular cambium, which produces secondary xylem and secondary phloem. This is a process that may continue throughout the life of the plant. This is what gives rise to
wood in plants. Such plants are called
arboraceous. This does not occur in plants that do not go through secondary growth, known as
herbaceous plants. •
Cork cambium, which gives rise to the periderm, which replaces the epidermis with bark and cork for example. ==Apical meristems== Apical meristems are the completely undifferentiated (indeterminate) meristems of a plant. They give rise to primary growth, enabling the elongation of shoots and roots. Apical meristems give rise to three types of primary meristems, which later develop into secondary or lateral meristems, contributing to the plant's lateral expansion. There are two main types of apical meristems:
shoot apical meristem (SAM) and
root apical meristem (RAM). The SAM is located at the tips of shoots and produces leaves, stems, and flowers, while the RAM is found at the tips of roots and generates new root tissues. Both types consist of rapidly-dividing cells that remain indeterminate, meaning they continuously produce new cells without a predefined final state, similar to
stem cells in animals, which have an analogous behavior and function. Structurally, apical meristems are organized into distinct zones. The central zone serves as a reservoir of undifferentiated cells, while the peripheral zone generates new organs and tissues. The medullary meristem contributes to vascular development, forming the medullary tissue, which makes up the plant's central structure. The meristem layers also vary depending on the plant type. The outermost layer, called the
tunica, determines the leaf edge and margin in
monocots, whereas in
dicots, the second layer of the
corpus influences leaf characteristics. Apical meristems are generally found at the tips of roots and stems, but in some
arctic plants, they are located in the lower or middle parts of the plant. This
adaptation is believed to provide advantages in extreme environmental conditions.
Shoot Apical Meristems '' (left). Fourteen days later, leaves have developed (right). of a shoot apical meristem surrounded by leaf
primordia of
Arabidopsis thaliana. in
Lycopodium clavatum (bar = 100 μm). Shoot apical meristems are the source of all above-ground organs, such as leaves and flowers. Cells at the shoot apical meristem summit serve as stem cells to the surrounding peripheral region, where they proliferate rapidly and are incorporated into differentiating leaf or flower primordia. The shoot apical meristem is the site of most of the embryogenesis in flowering plants.
Primordia of leaves, sepals, petals, stamens, and ovaries are initiated here at the rate of one every time interval, called a
plastochron. It is where the first indications that flower development has been evoked are manifested. One of these indications might be the loss of apical dominance and the release of otherwise dormant cells to develop as auxiliary shoot meristems, in some species in axils of primordia as close as two or three away from the apical dome. The shoot apical meristem consists of four distinct cell groups: •
Stem cells • The immediate daughter cells of the stem cells • A subjacent organizing center • Founder cells for organ initiation in surrounding regions These four distinct zones are maintained by a complex signalling pathway. In
Arabidopsis thaliana, 3 interacting
CLAVATA genes are required to regulate the size of the
stem cell reservoir in the shoot apical meristem by controlling the rate of
cell division.
CLV1 and CLV2 are predicted to form a receptor complex (of the
LRR receptor-like kinase family) to which CLV3 is a
ligand. CLV3 shares some
homology with the ESR proteins of maize, with a short 14
amino acid region being
conserved between the proteins. Proteins that contain these conserved regions have been grouped into the CLE family of proteins. KAPP is a
kinase-associated protein phosphatase that has been shown to interact with CLV1. KAPP is thought to act as a negative regulator of CLV1 by dephosphorylating it.
WUS is expressed in the cells below the stem cells of the meristem and its presence prevents the
differentiation of the stem cells. Subsequently, the phosphate groups are transferred onto two types of Arabidopsis response regulators (ARRs): Type-B ARRS and Type-A ARRs. Type-B ARRs work as transcription factors to activate genes downstream of
cytokinin, including A-ARRs. A-ARRs are similar to B-ARRs in structure; however, A-ARRs do not contain the DNA binding domains that B-ARRs have, and which are required to function as transcription factors. Therefore, A-ARRs do not contribute to the activation of transcription, and by competing for phosphates from phosphotransfer proteins, inhibit B-ARRs function. In the SAM, B-ARRs induce the expression of
WUS which induces stem cell identity.
WUS then suppresses A-ARRs. As a result, B-ARRs are no longer inhibited, causing sustained cytokinin signaling in the center of the shoot apical meristem. Altogether with CLAVATA signaling, this system works as a
negative feedback loop. Cytokinin signaling is positively reinforced by WUS to prevent the inhibition of cytokinin signaling, while WUS promotes its own inhibitor in the form of CLV3, which ultimately keeps WUS and cytokinin signaling in check.
Root apical meristem Unlike the shoot apical meristem, the root apical meristem produces cells in two dimensions. It harbors two pools of
stem cells around an organizing center called the quiescent center (QC) cells and together produces most of the cells in an adult root. At its apex, the root meristem is covered by the root cap, which protects and guides its growth trajectory. Cells are continuously sloughed off the outer surface of the
root cap. The QC cells are characterized by their low mitotic activity. Evidence suggests that the QC maintains the surrounding stem cells by preventing their differentiation, via signal(s) that are yet to be discovered. This allows a constant supply of new cells in the meristem required for continuous root growth. Recent findings indicate that QC can also act as a reservoir of stem cells to replenish whatever is lost or damaged. Root apical meristem and tissue patterns become established in the embryo in the case of the primary root, and in the new lateral root primordium in the case of secondary roots.
Intercalary meristem In
angiosperms, intercalary (sometimes called basal) meristems occur in
monocot (in particular,
grass) stems at the base of nodes and leaf blades.
Horsetails and
Welwitschia also exhibit intercalary growth. Intercalary meristems are capable of cell division, and they allow for rapid growth and regrowth of many monocots. Intercalary meristems at the nodes of bamboo allow for rapid stem elongation, while those at the base of most grass leaf blades allow damaged leaves to rapidly regrow. This leaf regrowth in grasses evolved in response to damage by grazing herbivores and/or wildfires.
Floral meristem When plants begin flowering, the shoot apical meristem is transformed into an inflorescence meristem, which goes on to produce the floral meristem, which produces the
sepals,
petals,
stamens, and
carpels of the flower. In contrast to vegetative apical meristems and some efflorescence meristems, floral meristems cannot continue to
grow indefinitely. Their growth is limited to the flower with a particular size and form. The transition from shoot meristem to floral meristem requires floral meristem identity genes, that both specify the floral organs and cause the termination of the production of stem cells.
AGAMOUS (
AG) is a floral homeotic gene required for floral meristem termination and necessary for proper development of the
stamens and
carpels. This way floral identity and region specificity is achieved. WUS activates AG by binding to a consensus sequence in the AG's second intron and LFY binds to adjacent recognition sites.
Diversity in meristem architectures The SAM contains a population of
stem cells that also produce the lateral meristems while the stem elongates. It turns out that the mechanism of regulation of the stem cell number might be evolutionarily conserved. The
CLAVATA gene
CLV2 responsible for maintaining the stem cell population in
Arabidopsis thaliana is very closely related to the
maize gene
FASCIATED EAR 2(
FEA2) also involved in the same function. Similarly, in
rice, the
FON1-FON2 system seems to bear a close relationship with the CLV signaling system in
Arabidopsis thaliana. These studies suggest that the regulation of stem cell number, identity and differentiation might be an evolutionarily conserved mechanism in
monocots, if not in
angiosperms. Rice also contains another genetic system distinct from
FON1-FON2, that is involved in regulating
stem cell number. indicating that the loss of spur in wild
Antirrhinum majus populations could probably be an evolutionary innovation. The KNOX family has also been implicated in
leaf shape evolution
(See below for a more detailed discussion). One study looked at the pattern of KNOX gene expression in
A. thaliana, that has simple leaves and
Cardamine hirsuta, a plant having
complex leaves. In
A. thaliana, the KNOX genes are completely turned off in leaves, but in
C.hirsuta, the expression continued, generating complex leaves. Also, it has been proposed that the mechanism of KNOX gene action is conserved across all
vascular plants, because there is a tight
correlation between KNOX expression and a
complex leaf morphology. ==Indeterminate growth of meristems==