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the most commonly translocated sugar
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Radioactive tracer / NMR The mass transfer rate of phloem: 1 to 15 g / h cm 2 The movement velocity xylem 30 to 150 cm / h (0.25 mm/ s) 4 mm/s (14.4 m/h) Rates of movement
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Pressure–flow model The mechanism of translocation in the phloem Phloem loading Phloem unloading pressure gradient between source and sink the resistance of sieve plates, maintain pressure gradient mass flow not osmosis, no membrane
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Sieve plate pores are open channels confocal laser scanning microscopy Earlier electron micrography Rapid freezing/fixation EM Confocal filter
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double stain: red/green arrowhead : plastids arrow( ): protein (L: sieve plate pores) : protein body SE: sieve element SP: sieve plate CC: company cell A living, functional sieve elements membrane / translocation No bidirection transport in single sieve element
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The energy requirement for phloem transport is small rapidly chilling a short segment of the petiole of a source leaf Short-term respiration rate and ATP metabolism , but … p. 233R: a metabolic inhibitor (cyanide) treatment, an extreme condition inhibit translocation observed by EM (1977), but confocal
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The predictions of the pressure-flow model have been confirmed Sieve plate pores are open channels. P-protein: along the periphery of the sieve tube elements, or it is evenly distributed throughout the lumen of the cell, but, previously…. Translocation rate is insensitive to the energy supply of the path tissues. in herbaceous plants Bidirectional transport cannot be seen in single sieve elements. Pressure gradients are sufficient to drive a mass flow of solution 0.41 MPa between sink and source 0.12 to 0.46 MPa is required for translocation by pressure flow
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Significant questions about the pressure-flow model still exist — What’s the mechanism of phloem transport in gymnosperms? — Osmoregulatory flow: osmotically generated mass flow (06)? — small herbaceous vs. large tree plants more different species Artificial sieve tubes as tools for studying phloem function (O-13) Created an artificial phloem microlithographically on microchips. Artificial sieve elements of 9-15 m diameter containing unique protein bodies were produced which formed continuous tubes but included constrictions resembling sieve plates. Using fluorescent dyes and confocal laser-scanning microscopy to trace the flow of artificial sieve tube under high [Ca 2+ ] condition.
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