9.2 Transport in phloem Flashcards

1
Q

Define translocation

A

TRANSLOCATION: movement of organic compounds (e.g. sugars, amino acids) from sources to sinks

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2
Q

Sources vs sinks

A

SOURCE: where the organic compounds are synthesised – photosynthetic tissues (leaves)

SINK: where compounds are delivered for use/storage (roots, fruits and seeds)

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3
Q

Explain phloem transport

A

Nutrient rich fluid - plant sap (hypertonic) transports organic compounds in phloem from sources to sinks via mass flow

Sources: org. comp via active transport (against conc gradient) through companion cells into phloem

Water enters phloem from xylem in osmosis - increases hydrostatic pressure - creates mass flow which moves org comp to sinks

Sinks: org comp taken up by companion cells - into sinks (used in metabolism/stored) - plant sap becomes hypotonic - water drawn back to xylem - hydrostatic pressure at sinks is lower

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4
Q

Phloem anatomy and functions

A
  • sieve element cell: compose the sieve tube, thick/rigid walls to resist pressure,
  • sieve plates: porous - enable flow, separate different sieve elements
  • companion cell: metabolic support for sieve elements (many mitoch), load/unload org comp from sources to sinks via active transport (transport proteins)
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5
Q

Xylem and phloem in roots

A

Monocotyledons:

Xylem - more internally

Phloem vessels - more externally

Dicotyledons:

Xylem - centrally cross-like shape (‘X’ for xylem)

Phloem surrounding xylem

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6
Q

Xylem and phloem in stems

A

Monocotyledons:

Phloem - positioned externally (towards outside of stem) – remember: phloem = outside

Dicotyledons:

Phloem and xylem vessels will be separated by the cambium (xylem on inside ; phloem on outside)

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7
Q

Companion cell transport

A

Active transport (ATP required):

Apoplastic path: through cell wall - pumped in membrane proteins - H+ gradient created

Symplastic path: through cytoplasm - pass through plasmodesmata

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8
Q

Factors of translocation rate

A
  • rate of photosynthesis (affected by light intensity, CO2 concentration, temperature)
  • rate of cellular respiration
  • rate of transpiration (how much water enters the phloem)
  • diameter of the sieve tubes (affect the hydrostatic pressure - differ between plant species)
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9
Q

Explain aphids

A

Aphids - group of insects which feed primarily on sap extracted from phloem

Have mouthpiece - stylet - pierces the plant’s sieve tube to allow sap to be extracted

Penetration of the stylet aided by digestive enzymes - soften the intervening tissue layers

When stylet removed, sap continues to flow - hydrostatic pressure within the sieve tube

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10
Q

How to measure translocation experimentally

A

Aphids can be used:

  • collect sap at various sites along a plant’s length and thus provide a measure of phloem transport rates
  • plant is grown in C14 carbon dioxide
  • leaves convertinto radioactively-labelled sugars - transported by the phloem
  • aphids positioned along the plant’s length - feed on the phloem sap
  • aphid stylet taken out - sap continues to flow from the plant at the selected positions
  • sap analysed for the presence of radioactively-labelled sugars
  • translocation rate calculated based on the time taken for the radioisotope to be detected at different positions
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11
Q

Xylem vs phloem

A
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