Abstract
Photoassimilates and other substances
accumulate against concentration gradients in the phloem, a process known as
loading. In mature leaves, the sieve element–companion cell complexes
(SE–CCCs) of minor veins, where loading occurs, are connected to
surrounding cells by plasmodesmata. These pores appear to participate in
loading in plants that translocate raffinose and stachyose, but in sucrose-
and polyol-translocating species their function is less certain. Indeed, large
numbers of plasmodesmata between the SE–CCCs and surrounding cells
should cause a dissolution of the concentration gradient unless the size
exclusion limit of the pores is small enough to retain accumulated solute
species. In leaves of willow, Salix babylonica L., a
sucrose-translocating plant with a high degree of symplastic connectivity into
the minor vein phloem, the sucrose concentration gradient is absent between
mesophyll and phloem, leading to the conclusion that phloem loading does not
occur. Once inside the SE–CCC, solute may be able to pass freely between
sieve elements and companion cells since they are also symplastically
connected. However, due to net flux into the sieve tubes in source leaves,
this should cause a continual drain of metabolic intermediates out of
companion cells. It is proposed that this transport step is regulated in minor
veins to prevent continual loss of needed solute molecules to the
translocation stream.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
17 articles.
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