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Meristem® Crop Performance, Inc. helps farmers produce more bushels for less cost per bushel. Meristem is the global leader in delivering live, in-field biologicals through the patented BIO-CAPSULE™ Technology platform.
In cell biology, the meristem is a type of tissue found in plants. It consists of undifferentiated cells (meristematic cells) capable of cell division. Cells in the meristem can develop into all the other tissues and organs that occur in plants. These cells continue to divide until they become differentiated and lose the ability to divide.
Meristem, region of cells capable of division and growth in plants. Meristem cells are typically small cells the diameters of which in different directions are about equal. They have a dense cytoplasm and relatively few small vacuoles (watery saclike enclosures).
Plant meristems are centers of mitotic cell division, and are composed of a group of undifferentiated self-renewing stem cells from which most plant structures arise. Meristematic cells are also responsible for keeping the plant growing.
The root apical meristem produces the three primary meristems: procambium, ground meristem, and protoderm. The procambium gives rise to vascular tissues, including the primary xylem and primary phloem.
In plants, the meristem is the area of tissue from which new growths are formed. At the meristem, the plant cells are continually proliferating and are not yet differentiated.
Meristematic tissues contain living cells with varied shapes. They possess a large nucleus devoid of the vacuole. The cells have no intercellular space. The zone where these cells exist is known as meristem.
The meristematic tissue is also known as a meristem. It is found in areas of the plant where growth occurs, such as the tips of shoots and roots. The cells of the meristem are called meristematic cells.
Meristematic tissue, commonly called meristem, is a group of undifferentiated cells that remain young and divide indefinitely throughout plant life. Cells in the meristem can develop into any tissues and organs in plants.
Meristems are stem cell-containing structures that produce all plant organs and are therefore important targets for crop improvement. Developmental regulators control the balance and rate of cell divisions within the meristem. Altering these regulators impacts meristem architecture and, as a consequence, plant form.