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I've go the same meaning in my notes but I'm looking for 1-1.5 paragraphs that speak about the overall process of the movement of substances in the phloem. Just because if I memorised the information you mentioned I might not be able to structure properly if a question was asked about this theory.PHLOEM:
- Movement of organic molecules, eg sugars, amino acids and hormones, in the phloem is called translocation.
- Materials are transported both up and down the stem. Materials are distributed especially to the growing points and reproductive structures, including developing fruits and seeds
- Flow of materials in the phloem is an active process that requires energy
- It is thought to occur by a mechanism called the source-path-sink system and is driven by a gradient generated osmotically
- The source-path-sink THEORY:
- In the plants, there are SOURCES of nutrients, e.g. leaf cells are the sources of glucose. As the glucose builds up, the cells transport the glucose by active transport into the phloem tubes, by 2 ways:
- SYMPLASTIC LOADING: Sugars and nutrients move in the cytoplasm from the mesophyll cells to the sieve elements through plasmodesmata joining adjacent cells (NOTE: Plasmodesmata have not been found in all plants)
- APOPLASTIC LOADING: Sugar and nutrients move along the cell walls to the sieve tube. Then they cross the cell membrane by active transport.
- As sugars enter the phloem the concentration of phloem sap increases and the water decreases. This causes the entry of water by osmosis from the surrounding cells. This resulting pressure causes water and dissolved solutes to flow towards a SINK.
- A sink is a region of the plant where sugars and other nutrients are actively begin removed from the phloem. As sugars move out of the phloem, water flows out with them. This reduces the pressure in the sieve cells at the sink region.