Apoplastic phloem loaders have an apoplastic step in the movement of the translocated sugar, prototypically sucrose, from the mesophyll to the companion cell-sieve tube element complex. In these plants, leaf apoplastic sucrose becomes concentrated in the guard cell wall to nominally 150 mM by transpiration during the photoperiod. This concentration of external sucrose is sufficient to diminish stomatal aperture size in an isolated system and to regulate expression of certain genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeaves regulate gas exchange through control of stomata in the epidermis. Stomatal aperture increases when the flanking guard cells accumulate K+ or other osmolytes. K+ accumulation is stoichiometric with H+ extrusion, which is compensated for by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC, EC 4.
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