Abstract

Analyses of vascular saps supplying source and sink organs havedemonstrated the presence of major endogenous hormones and/or theirprecursors. Indol-3yl-acetic acid, a number of gibberellins, cytokininsand abscisic acid, as well as the precursor for ethylene production havebeen found in these vascular saps, allowing the sites of hormonalsynthesis and putative target tissues to be deduced. Exogenously appliedhormones are also readily loaded into these vascular pathways and may betranslocated over considerable distances from a point of application.Observations such as these indicate a possible co-ordination systembetween source and sink regulated by the synthesis and transport ofendogenous hormones. It is widely accepted that the partitioning ofassimilates between photosynthetic source organs and utilising sinkorgans is regulated by endogenous plant hormones. The key intermediatesteps involved in assimilate transport, such as phloem loading andunloading, have been shown to be responsive to applied hormones,although the role of endogenous hormones in these processes remainsessentially unresolved. Results of the analyses of vascular saps fromRicinus communis, which have been obtained using a range ofphysicochemical methods, are compared and contrasted with those obtainedby the application of exogenous hormones or their precursors. Theseresults are evaluated critically and interpreted in the light of currentmodels of source:sink regulatory processes and the long-distancetransport of auxins and cytokinins in higher plants.

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