PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 104, Issue 1 7-16, Copyright © 1994 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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DEVELOPMENT AND GROWTH REGULATION |
Monitoring Phloem Unloading and Post-Phloem Transport by Microperfusion of Attached Wheat Grains
N. Wang and D. B. Fisher
Department of Botany, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164-4238
Phloem unloading and post-phloem transport in developing wheat (Triticum
aestivum L.) grains were investigated by perfusing the endosperm cavities
of attached grains. Relative unloading ratio (RUR) and the rate of sucrose
release into the endosperm cavity (SRR) were calculated, respectively, from
14C import and from sucrose washout from the cavity. RUR and SRR continued
at or near in vivo rates over a wide range of cavity sap osmolality (90 to
approximately 500 milliosmolal) and sucrose concentration (14-430 mM) and
for long times (29 h). These are much greater ranges than have been
observed for the endosperm cavity in vivo (230-300 milliosmolal, and 40-120
mM, respectively), indicating that neither the cavity sap osmolality nor
sucrose concentration are controlling factors for the rate of assimilate
import into the cavity. The maintenance of in vivo transport rates over a
wide range of conditions strongly implicates the role of transport
processes within the maternal tissues of the wheat grain, rather than
activities of the embryo or endosperm, in determining the rate of
assimilate import into the grain. RUR was decreased by high concentrations
of sucrose and sorbitol, but not of mannitol. By plasmolyzing some chalazal
cells, sorbitol appeared to block symplastic transport across the crease
tissues, but neither sucrose nor mannitol caused plasmolysis in maternal
tissues of attached grains. The inhibition of RUR by KCN and carbonyl
cyanide m-chlorophenyl (CCCP) and the continued import of sucrose into
grains against its concentration gradient suggest that solute movement into
the endosperm cavity might occur by active membrane transport. However, the
evidence is weak, since KCN and CCCP appeared to act primarily on some
aspect of symplastic (i.e. nonmembrane) transport. Also, sucrose could move
from the endosperm cavity into the maternal tissues (i.e. opposite to the
normal direction of sucrose movement), suggesting that transmembrane
movement in the nucellus may be a reversible process. Pressure-driven flow
into the grain could account for movement against a concentration gradient.