After mitosis, one of the two resulting cells may mature along one of three developmental directions. I disagree fundamentally with your text author that all derivatives become parenchyma cells and then mature into the other two cell types. But then, I disagree completely with the author on almost all of his summary of parenchyma cells. He has missed the mark on many points (see in Chapter 13 remarks) in my opinion.
Parenchyma cells have thin primary walls and highly functional cytoplasm. The cells are alive at maturity and are responsible for a wide range of biochemical processes. For example, other than xylem in vascular bundles, the leaf is composed of parenchyma cells. Some, as in the epidermis, are specialized for light penetration, regulating gas exchange, or anti-herbivory physiology. Other cells, as in the mesophyll, are specialized for photosynthesis or phloem loading.
The design and function is to build and maintain the special unevenly-thick primary cell wall. The cells are also typically quite elongate. The role of this cell type is to support the plant in areas still growing in length. The primary wall lacks lignin that would make it brittle, so this cell type provides what could be called plastic support. Such support can hold a young stem or petiole into the air, but this is accomplished by cells that can be stretched as the cells around them elongate. Stretchable support (without elastic snap-back) is a good way to describe what collenchyma does. Parts of the strings in celery are collenchyma.
Functions for sclerenchyma cells include discouraging herbivory (hard cells that rip open digestive passages in small insect larval stages, hard cells forming a pit wall in a peach fruit), support (the wood in a tree trunk, fibers in large herbs), and conduction (hollow cells lined end-to-end in xylem with cytoplasm and end walls missing).
Sclerenchyma includes the fibers used for making thread and fabric...particularly the fibers from flax that are spun and woven into linen. Review the history of Willimantic, CT.
This page © Ross E. Koning 1994.
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Koning, Ross E. "Plant Cell Types". Plant Physiology Website. 1994. http://koning.ecsu.ctstateu.edu/plant_biology/celltypes.html (your visit date).
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