Phloem transport of amino acids in relation to their cytosolic levels in barley leaves

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Abstract

A comparison of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves was made between the cytosolic content of amino acids and sucrose as determined by subcellular fractionation and the corresponding concentration in phloem sap, which was collected continuously for up to 6 days from severed aphid stylets. Because amino acids were found to be almost absent from the vacuoles, and because the amino acid patterns in the stroma and cytosol are similar, whole leaf contents could be taken as a measure of cytosolic amino acid levels for a comparison of data during a diurnal cycle. The results show that the pattern of amino acids in the phloem sap was very similar to the pattern in the cytosol. Therefore, we concluded that the overall process of transfer of amino acids from the cytosol of the source cells into the sieve tubes, although carrier mediated, may be a passive process and that the translocation of amino acids via the sieve tubes requires the mass flow of sucrose driven by the active sucrose transport involved by the phloem loading.

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Winter, H., Lohaus, G., & Heldt, H. W. (1992). Phloem transport of amino acids in relation to their cytosolic levels in barley leaves. Plant Physiology, 99(3), 996–1004. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.99.3.996

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