Statolith

Statoliths are a specialised form of amyloplasts involved in gravity perception by plants.

These specialised amyloplasts are denser than the cytoplasm and can sediment according to the gravity vector. They are found in a special subset of cells of the root cap (a tissue at the tip of the root) called statocytes. Statoliths are enmeshed in a web of actin and it is thought that their sedimentation transmits the gravitropic signal by activating mechanosensing channels. The gravitropic signal then leads to reorientation of auxin efflux carriers and subsequent redistribution of auxin streams in root cap and root as a whole. The changed relations in concentration of auxin leads to differerential growth of the root tissues. Taken together, the root is then turning, following the gravity stimuli. Statocyts are also found in the endodermic layer of the inflorescence stem. The redistribution of auxin causes the shoot to turn in a direction opposite that of the gravity stimuli.

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 * Plastid
 * Chloroplast and etioplast
 * Chromoplast
 * Leucoplast
 * Amyloplast
 * Statolith
 * Elaioplast
 * Proteinoplast

Statolith Statolithe