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chloroplast
(redirected from Chloroplasts)

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.04 sec.
chlo·ro·plast  (klôr-plst, klr-) also chlo·ro·plas·tid (klôr-plstd, klr-)
n.
A chlorophyll-containing plastid found in algal and green plant cells.


chloro·plastic (-plstk) adj.

chloroplast
Noun
Biol one of the parts of a plant cell that contains chlorophyll [chloro- + Greek plastos formed]

chloroplast  (klôr-plst)
A plastid in the cells of green plants and green algae that contains chlorophylls and carotenoid pigments and creates glucose through photosynthesis. In plants, chloroplasts are usually disk-shaped and can reorient themselves in the cell to vary their exposure to sunlight. Chloroplasts contain the saclike membranes known as thylakoids, which contain the chlorophyll and are arranged in stacklike structures known as grana. Besides conducting photosynthesis, plant chloroplasts store starch and are involved in amino acid synthesis. Like mitochondria, chloroplasts have their own DNA that is different from the DNA in the nucleus, and chloroplasts are therefore believed to have evolved from symbiont bacteria, their DNA being a remnant of their past existence as independent organisms. See more at cellphotosynthesis
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.chloroplast - plastid containing chlorophyll and other pigments; in plants that carry out photosynthesis
plastid - any of various small particles in the cytoplasm of the cells of plants and some animals containing pigments or starch or oil or protein


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Moreover, if today's Alaskan white spruce trees were descended solely from those in distant forests, the genetic variations found in their chloroplasts would be a subset of the genetic diversity found in trees elsewhere.
With this glyphosate-insensitive target site protein in the chloroplasts, glyphosate does not inhibit the normal synthesis of aromatic amino acids, and the plant is "ready" to resist.
Chloroplasts (the little factories in plant cells that use sunlight to produce energy) have their own small sets of genes.
 
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