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Sucrose transport and hexose release in the maize scutellum
Authors:Thomas E Humphreys
Institution:Department of Botany, Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, U.S.A.
Abstract:Since hexoses readily diffuse from maize scutellum cells, it should be possible to detect them if they are produced during sucrose transport at the tonoplast or the plasmalemma. To test this idea, scutellum slices were placed in dinitrophenol (DNP) (which inhibits hexose utilization while greatly increasing utilization of vacuolar sucrose), and the utilization, uptake and leakage of sugars were measured. Only negligible amounts of hexose appeared in the DNP solution during a 5-hr incubation during which the slices metabolized 72μmol of sucrose. Glucose and fructose, added at a concentration of 2 mM, were taken up by the slices at rates 33% and 14% (respectively) of the rate of vacuolar sucrose utilization. It is suggested, therefore, that sucrose transport at the tonoplast does not release free hexose into the cytoplasm. Sucrose transport at the plasmalemma was studied using DNP- and mannose-treated slices. During incubation of these slices in sucrose, the disappearance of sucrose resulted in the appearance of significant quantities of glucose and fructose in the bathing solution. Evidence is presented that sucrose is split into glucose and fructose during transport across the plasmalemma. It is concluded that free hexose is not normally a product of this splitting but is a result of an uncoupling in the transport system caused by the DNP or mannose treatments.
Keywords:Gramineae: maize  scutellum  sucrose transport  tonoplast: plasmalemma  hexose  
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