Abstract
Plants integrate a variety of biotic and abiotic factors for optimal growth in their given environment. While some of these responses are local, others occur distally. Hence, communication of signals perceived in one organ to a second, distal part of the plant and the coordinated developmental response require an intricate signaling system. To do so, plants developed a bipartite vascular system that mediates the uptake of water, minerals, and nutrients from the soil; transports high-energy compounds and building blocks; and traffics essential developmental and stress signals. One component of the plant vasculature is the phloem. The development of highly sensitive mass spectrometry and molecular methods in the last decades has enabled us to explore the full complexity of the phloem content. As a result, our view of the phloem has evolved from a simple transport path of photoassimilates to a major highway for pathogens, hormones and developmental signals. Understanding phloem transport is essential to comprehend the coordination of environmental inputs with plant development and, thus, ensure food security. This review discusses recent developments in its role in long-distance signaling and highlights the role of some of the signaling molecules. What emerges is an image of signaling paths that do not just involve single molecules but rather, quite frequently an interplay of several distinct molecular classes, many of which appear to be transported and acting in concert.
Highlights
The vascular system is fundamental for systemic transport of energy-rich molecules, building blocks, and nutrients in the plant
The main conduit for phloem transport, the sieve element (SE), are enucleated cells separated by porous sieve plates, through which long-distance transport occurs by bulk flow according to Muench’s Pressure-Flow Hypothesis [1]
The loading of photoassimilates can follow several paths, namely, active apoplastic transport facilitated by Sugar Will Eventually be Exported Transporters (SWEETs) and Sucrose Transporters (SUTs); passive symplastic loading through plasmodesmata (PD) between mesophyll, companion cell (CC), and the SE; or polymer trapping dependent on the generation of a concentration gradient via the synthesis of raffinose and stachyose from sucrose [2,3,4,5]
Summary
The vascular system is fundamental for systemic transport of energy-rich molecules, building blocks, and nutrients in the plant.
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