Abstract

Sucrose concentrations were measured in serial frozen sections of the post-phloem transport pathway in developing wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) grains. In normally importing grains, there was an approximately linear concentration gradient along the pathway, with a difference between the ends of the pathway of about 180 mM. This indicates an unusually low resistance for cell-to-cell transport, due perhaps to the large size-exclusion limit for the pathway. However, the existence of concentration gradients raises presently unresolvable questions about the relative contributions of diffusion versus bulk flow to transport within the symplast. The concentration gradient disappeared when sucrose movement ceased (i.e. in excised grains or when endosperm cavities of attached grains were perfused with p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate [PCMBS] or with 1660 mOsm sorbitol). PCMBS appeared to block solute release into the endosperm cavity, whereas the sorbitol treatment, previously shown to cause localized plasmolysis in the chalaza, appeared to block movement across the chalaza. Sieve element/companion cell unloading appears to be an important control point for assimilate import. The sucrose concentration gradient and, probably, turgor and osmotic gradients are extremely steep there. PCMBS blocked import without affecting the sucrose concentration in the vascular parenchyma around the phloem. Thus, blockage of unloading was more complex than a simple "backing up" of solutes in the vascular parenchyma.

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