Coleoptile is the pointed protective sheath covering the emerging shoot in monocotyledons such as grasses in which few leaf primordia and shoot apex of monocot embryo remain enclosed. The coleoptile protects the first leaf as well as the growing stem in seedlings and eventually, allows the first leaf to emerge. Coleoptiles have two , one on either side. Unlike the flag leaves rolled up within, the pre-emergent coleoptile does not accumulate significant protochlorophyll or carotenoids, and so it is generally very pale. Some preemergent coleoptiles do, however, accumulate purple anthocyanin pigments.
Coleoptiles consist of very similar cells that are all specialised to fast stretch growth. They do not divide, but increase in size as they accumulate more water. Coleoptiles also have water vessels (frequently two) along the axis to provide a water supply.
When a coleoptile reaches the surface, it stops growing and the flag leaves penetrate its top, continuing to grow along. The wheat coleoptile is most developed in the third day of the germination (if in the darkness).
The Cholodny–Went model is named after Frits Warmolt Went of the California Institute of Technology and the Ukrainian scientist Nikolai Cholodny, who reached the same conclusion independently in 1927. It describes the phototropism and gravitropism properties of emerging shoots of . The model proposes that auxin, a plant growth hormone, is synthesized in the Meristem, which senses light or gravity and will send the auxin down the appropriate side of the shoot. This causes symmetry growth of one side of the plant. As a result, the plant shoot will begin to bend toward a light source or toward the surface.
Coleoptiles also exhibit strong geotropism reaction, always growing upward and correcting direction after reorientation. Geotropic reaction is regulated by light (more exactly by phytochrome action).
The length of the coleoptile can be divided into an irreversible fraction, length at Turgor pressure pressure 0, and reversible fraction, or elastic shrinking. Changes induced by White increase water potential in epidermal cells and decrease osmotic pressure, which resulted in an increase in the length of the coleoptile. The presence of the expanding coleoptile has also been shown to support developing tissues in the seedling as a Hydrostatics prior to its emergence through the coleoptile tip.
Adventitious roots initially derive from the coleoptile Plant node, which quickly overtake the Radicle by volume.
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