Sucrose in the Free Space of Translocating Maize Leaf Bundles
- 1 October 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 62 (4) , 491-494
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.62.4.491
Abstract
Following exposure of portions of mature maize (Zea mays L.) leaf strips to 14CO2, xylem exudate from the leaf strips contained [14C]sucrose. Sucrose was the only sugar in the xylem exudate which was obtained from the cut surface of the leaf strips by reducing the external pressure. The sucrose found in the xylem exudate apparently was obtained from the free space of the vascular bundles, its concentration amounting up to 0.25%. When [14C]glucose or [14C]fructose was supplied in the dark to 1 end of a maize leaf strip, each was taken up by the xylem and transported to the opposite end. Xylem exudate from such leaf strips contained 14C-labeled sucrose in addition to 14C-labeled hexose. The results support the view that sucrose is loaded into the companion cell-sieve tube complexes from the apoplast of the vascular bundles in the maize leaf.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Leaf structure in relation to solute transport and phloem loading in Zea mays L.Planta, 1978
- Phloem Loading of SucrosePlant Physiology, 1977
- Distribution and structure of the plasmodesmata in mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells of Zea mays L.Planta, 1977
- The influence of externally supplied sucrose on phloem transport in the maize leaf stripPlanta, 1977
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- Role of Free Space in Translocation in Sugar BeetPlant Physiology, 1974
- Evidence for Active Phloem Loading in the Minor Veins of Sugar BeetPlant Physiology, 1974