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  • Malus domestica  (3)
  • Sieve tube  (3)
  • Springer  (6)
  • American Geophysical Union (AGU)
  • American Institute of Physics (AIP)
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Publisher
  • Springer  (6)
  • American Geophysical Union (AGU)
  • American Institute of Physics (AIP)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Trees 8 (1993), S. 56-60 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Malus domestica ; Bioenergetics ; Fruit ; Photosynthesis ; Respiration ; Source-sink
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Carbon budgets were calculated from net photosynthesis and dark respiration measurements for canopies of field-grown, 3-year-old apple trees (Malus domestica Borkh.) with maximum leaf areas of 5.4 m2 in a temperature-controlled Perspex tree chamber, measured in situ over 2 years (July 1988 to October 1990) by computerized infrared gas analysis using a dedicated interface and software. Net photosynthesis (Pn) and carbon assimilation per leaf area peaked at respectively 8.3 and 7.7 μmol CO2 m−2 s−1 in April. Net photosynthesis (Pn) and dark respiration (Rd) per tree peaked at 3.6 g CO2 tree−1 h−1 (Pn) and 1.2 g CO2 tree−1 h−1 (Rd), equivalent to 4.2 μmol CO2 (Pn) and 1.4 μmol CO2 (Rd) m−2 s−1 with maximum carbon gain per tree in August and maximum dark respiration per tree in October 1988 and 1989. In May 1990, a tree was deblossomed. Pn (per tree) of the fruiting apple tree canopy exceeded that of the non-fruiting tree by 2–2.5 fold from June to August 1990, attributed to reduced photorespiration (RI), and resulting in a 2-fold carbon gain of the fruiting over the non-fruiting tree. Dark respiration of the fruiting tree canopy progressively exceeded, with increasing sink strength of the fruit, by 51% (June–August), 1.4-fold (September) and 2-fold (October) that of the non-fruiting tree due to leaf (i. e. not fruit) respiration to provide energy (a) to produce and maintain the fruit on the tree and (b) thereafter to facilitate the later carbohydrate translocation into the woody perennial parts of the tree. The fruiting tree reached its optium carbon budget 2–4 weeks earlier (August) then the non-fruiting tree (September 1990). In the winter, the trunk respired 2–100 g CO2 month−1 tree−1. These data represent the first long-term examination of the effect of fruiting without fruit removal which shows increased dark respiration and with the increase progressing as the fruit developed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Assimilate transport ; Leaf (14C transport) ; Phloem loading ; Sieve tube ; Vascular bundle ; Zea (14C transport)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Microautoradiographs showed that [14C]sucrose taken up in the xylem of small and intermediate (longitudinal) vascular bundles of Zea mays leaf strips was quickly accumulated by vascular parenchyma cells abutting the vessels. The first sieve tubes to exhibit 14C-labeling during the [14C]sucrose experiments were thick-walled sieve tubes contiguous to the more heavily labeled vascular parenchyma cells. (These two cell types typically have numerous plasmodesmatal connections.) With increasing [14C]sucrose feeding periods, greater proportions of thick- and thin-walled sieve tubes became labeled, but few of the labeled thin-walled sieve tubes were associated with labeled companion cells. (Only the thin-walled sieve tubes are associated with companion cells.) When portions of leaf strips were exposed to 14CO2 for 5 min, the vascular parenchyma cells-regardless of their location in relation to the vessels or sieve tubes-were the most consistently labeled cells of small and intermediate bundles, and label (14C-photosynthate) appeared in a greater proportion of thin-walled sieve tubes than thick-walled sieve tubes. After a 5-min chase with 12CO2, the thin-walled sieve tubes were more heavily labeled than any other cell type of the leaf. After a 10-min chase with 12CO2, the thin-walled sieve tubes were even more heavily labeled. The companion cells generally were less heavily labeled than their associated thin-walled sieve tubes. Although all of the thick-walled sieve tubes were labeled in portions of leaf strips fed 14CO2 for 5 min and given a 10-min 12CO2 chase, only five of 72 vascular bundles below the 14CO2-exposed portions contained labeled thick-walled sieve tubes. Moreover, the few labeled thick-walledsieve tubes of the “transport region” always abutted 14C-labeled vascular parenchyma cells. The results of this study indicate that (1) the vascular parenchyma cells are able to retrieve at least sucrose from the vessels and transfer it to the thick-walled sieve tubes, (2) the thick-walled sieve tubes are not involved in long-distance transport, and (3) the thin-walled sieve tubes are capable themselves of accumulating sucrose and photosynthates from the apoplast, without the companion cells serving as intermediary cells.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Companion cell ; Membrane potential ; Ricinus ; Sieve tube ; Spongy mesophyll ; Sucrose (uptake, accumulation)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The aim of the study was to show which tissues and cell types of the cotyledon of Ricinus communis L. are responsible for uptake of sucrose by H+-sucrose symport. The cotyledons were incubated in labelled sucrose for up to 20 min and then the amount of radioactivity in each cell type of the cotyledon was assessed by microautoradiography. It was found that 50% of the label was present in the spongy mesophyll, and 10–15% was in the bundles, the epidermal layers and the palisade parenchyma. The sieve tubes contained only 2–3% of the label. The addition of sucrose to cotyledons depolarized the membrane of spongy-mesophyll cells by 33 mV. Therefore, it was concluded that the previously found H+-sucrose symport is at least partly located at the spongy mesophyll. No precursor-like behaviour of the label in mesophyll or bundle-sheath cells was observed in pulse-chase experiments, which indicates a direct uptake of sucrose by the sieve tube-companion cell complex from the apoplast.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Planta 178 (1989), S. 1-9 
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Leaf (assimilate transport) ; Phloem loading ; Phloem transport ; Sieve tube ; Vascular bundle ; Zea (assimilate transport)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The loading and transport functions of vascular bundles in maize (Zea mays L.) leaf strips were investigated by microautoradiography after application of 14CO2. The concentrations of 14C-contents in thin-walled sieve tubes of individual bundles in the loading and transport regions were determined by digital image analysis of silver-grain density over the sieve tubes and compared. In the loading region, relatively high concentrations of 14C-contents were found in the thin-walled sieve tubes of small bundles and in the small, thin-walled sieve tubes of the intermediate bundles; the concentration of 14C-label in large bundles was very low. In the transport region, at a transport distance of 2 cm, all of the small bundles contained 14C-assimilates, but generally less than the same bundles did in the loading region; by comparison, at that distance intermediate and large bundles contained two-to threefold more 14C-assimilates than the same bundles in the loading region. The lateral transfer of assimilates from smaller to larger bundles via transverse veins could be demonstrated directly in microautoradiographs. A reverse transport from larger to smaller bundles was not found. At a transport distance of 4 cm, all large and intermediate bundles were 14C-labeled, but many of the small bundles were not. Although all longitudinal bundles were able to transport 14C-asimilates longitudinally down the blade, it was the large bundles that were primarily involved with longitudinal transport and the small bundles that were primarily involved with loading.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant growth regulation 32 (2000), S. 205-217 
    ISSN: 1573-5087
    Keywords: auxin ; correlative dominance ; correlative signals ; cytokinins ; Lycopersicum esculentum ; Malus domestica ; Pisum sativum
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Correlative dominance requires correlative signals from a dominant to a dominated organ. Auxins, particularly IAA, and cytokinins are obviously important components of this correlative system. Using a vegetative pea shoot and a generative apple and tomato fruit system it can be demonstrated that dominant organs always export more IAA and have a higher 3H-IAA transport capacity and velocity compared to dominated organs. In both systems the dominant organ can be replaced by the application of auxin, e.g. NAA, which maintains the differences in IAA export. This is an indication that similar regulatory mechanisms control dominance in both of these diverse systems. The possibility of replacing a dominant organ by auxin also makes it unlikely that growth of that organ or allocation of nutrients regulates the correlative inhibition of the dominated organ.It is suggested that differences in IAA export from, and transport capacities of, dominant and dominated shoots, may be explained by a mechanism of auxin transport autoinhibition (ATA), whereby the earlier and stronger export of IAA from the dominant shoot inhibits auxin export from the dominated shoot at the point where the two auxin streams converge. This hypothesis was tested with explants of pea, apple and tomato. It was shown that the basal application of cold IAA significantly reduced endogenous as well as exogenous IAA transport through these explants.Since the reduced IAA transport of dominated organs was not followed by an accumulation of IAA in the auxin producing subtending organ, it was concluded that IAA biosynthesis was possibly reduced and/or IAA conjugation stimulated. This could have been one of the determinants of their growth inhibition. ATA might also explain how the unidirectional IAA signal may affect the growth rate of organs even lateral or acropetal to its transport pathway and thus polar IAA-transport becomes a ``multidirectional'' signal. From the experiments demonstrated it seems that ATA is a sufficient mechanism to impose growth inhibition in the dominated organ, without the need of other regulators.However, to release dominated organs from dominance cessation of ATA may not be sufficient and cytokinins are obviously a powerful antagonist to auxins. Their repeated exogenous application turns dominated lateral buds into strongly growing organs which ultimately may even dominate the previously dominant apex. These lateral shoots finally gain a strong IAA export capacity and inhibit, by ATA, IAA export from the hitherto dominant apex.In other experiments it was shown that interruption of polar IAA transport leads to a strong increase in root derived cytokinins. This can largely be prevented, in a concentration dependent manner, by the application of auxin, indicating that basipolar auxin may control cytokinin production in the roots and its possible delivery to lateral buds. In turn, the increased delivery of cytokinins to the lateral buds promotes a strong increase in IAA production and export. Thus there is a strong mutual interaction between auxin production in the shoots and cytokinin production in the roots, which may be important in regulating the balance between root and shoot growth.
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant growth regulation 28 (1999), S. 55-58 
    ISSN: 1573-5087
    Keywords: biennial bearing ; endogenous gibberellins ; exudates ; LC-ESI-MS ; Malus domestica
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract In exudates from developing apple fruits GA1, GA3, GA4, GA7, GA20 and GA34 could be identified and subsequently quantified by LC-ESI-MS selected-ion-monitoring analyses on the basis of internal standards. This is the first evidence obtained by mass spectrometrical analysis which demonstrates export of endogenous GAs from the fruits during the period when flower induction occurs. The observed differences in GA4 export are discussed in connection with biennial bearing.
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