Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem

<p>Roots and shoots of plant bodies develop from meristems—cell populations that self-renew and produce cells that undergo differentiation—located at the apices of axes [1].The oldest preserved root apices in which cellular anatomy can be imaged are found in nodules of permineralized fossil so...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hetherington, A, Dubrovsky, J, Dolan, L
Format: Journal article
Published: Cell Press 2016
_version_ 1826270288272162816
author Hetherington, A
Dubrovsky, J
Dolan, L
author_facet Hetherington, A
Dubrovsky, J
Dolan, L
author_sort Hetherington, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>Roots and shoots of plant bodies develop from meristems—cell populations that self-renew and produce cells that undergo differentiation—located at the apices of axes [1].The oldest preserved root apices in which cellular anatomy can be imaged are found in nodules of permineralized fossil soils called coal balls [2], which formed in the Carboniferous coal swamp forests over 300 million years ago [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9]. However, no fossil root apices described to date were actively growing at the time of preservation [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10]. Because the cellular organization of meristems changes when root growth stops, it has been impossible to compare cellular dynamics as stem cells transition to differentiated cells in extinct and extant taxa [11]. We predicted that meristems of actively growing roots would be preserved in coal balls. Here we report the discovery of the first fossilized remains of an actively growing root meristem from permineralized Carboniferous soil with detail of the stem cells and differentiating cells preserved. The cellular organization of the meristem is unique. The position of the Körper-Kappe boundary, discrete root cap, and presence of many anticlinal cell divisions within a broad promeristem distinguish it from all other known root meristems. This discovery is important because it demonstrates that the same general cellular dynamics are conserved between the oldest extinct and extant root meristems. However, its unique cellular organization demonstrates that extant root meristem organization and development represents only a subset of the diversity that has existed since roots first evolved.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:38:30Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:4715a646-6c83-4124-bbb5-b26899c39a6d
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T21:38:30Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Cell Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:4715a646-6c83-4124-bbb5-b26899c39a6d2022-03-26T15:17:55ZUnique cellular organization in the oldest root meristemJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4715a646-6c83-4124-bbb5-b26899c39a6dSymplectic Elements at OxfordCell Press2016Hetherington, ADubrovsky, JDolan, L<p>Roots and shoots of plant bodies develop from meristems—cell populations that self-renew and produce cells that undergo differentiation—located at the apices of axes [1].The oldest preserved root apices in which cellular anatomy can be imaged are found in nodules of permineralized fossil soils called coal balls [2], which formed in the Carboniferous coal swamp forests over 300 million years ago [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9]. However, no fossil root apices described to date were actively growing at the time of preservation [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10]. Because the cellular organization of meristems changes when root growth stops, it has been impossible to compare cellular dynamics as stem cells transition to differentiated cells in extinct and extant taxa [11]. We predicted that meristems of actively growing roots would be preserved in coal balls. Here we report the discovery of the first fossilized remains of an actively growing root meristem from permineralized Carboniferous soil with detail of the stem cells and differentiating cells preserved. The cellular organization of the meristem is unique. The position of the Körper-Kappe boundary, discrete root cap, and presence of many anticlinal cell divisions within a broad promeristem distinguish it from all other known root meristems. This discovery is important because it demonstrates that the same general cellular dynamics are conserved between the oldest extinct and extant root meristems. However, its unique cellular organization demonstrates that extant root meristem organization and development represents only a subset of the diversity that has existed since roots first evolved.</p>
spellingShingle Hetherington, A
Dubrovsky, J
Dolan, L
Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
title Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
title_full Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
title_fullStr Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
title_full_unstemmed Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
title_short Unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
title_sort unique cellular organization in the oldest root meristem
work_keys_str_mv AT hetheringtona uniquecellularorganizationintheoldestrootmeristem
AT dubrovskyj uniquecellularorganizationintheoldestrootmeristem
AT dolanl uniquecellularorganizationintheoldestrootmeristem