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Plant Physiology 49:82-86 (1972) © 1972 American Society of Plant Biologists Sugar Transport in Immature Internodal Tissue of SugarcaneI. Mechanism and Kinetics of Accumulation 1a Department of Plant Physiology, Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Hawaii, Hilo, Hawaii 96720
Transmembrane sugar transport into immature internodal parenchyma tissue of sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.) is a metabolically regulated process as evidenced by its sensitivity to pH, temperature, anaerobiosis, and metabolic inhibitors. All sugars studiedglucose, fructose, galactose, sorbose, glucose 6-phosphate, 3-O-methylglucose, and 2-deoxy-D-glucosewere apparently transported via the same carrier sites since they competed with each other for uptake. External concentrations of these sugars at one-half Vmax were in the range of 3.9 to 8.4 nM. Preliminary data indicated that phosphorylation may be closely associated with glucose transport. The dominant intracellular sugar after 4-hours incubation was sucrose when glucose, glucose-6-P, or fructose was the exogenously supplied sugar; but when galactose was supplied, only 28% of intracellular radioactivity was in sucrose. Sorbose, 3-O-methylglucose, and 2-deoxy-D-glucose were not metabolized. Thus, by using these analogs, transport could be studied independently of subsequent metabolism, effectively eliminating a complicating factor in previous studies.
1 Journal Series No. 1330 of the Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station.
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