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Plant Physiology 42:751-756 (1967) © 1967 American Society of Plant Biologists Time Course of Low Temperature Inhibition of Sucrose Translocation in Sugar Beets 1Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, Department of Biology, University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio
Further studies are presented characterizing the time-course response of sucrose translocation in sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L. cv Klein Wanzleben) to low temperature inhibition. Only the temperature of a 2 cm zone of the source-leaf petiole was varied (1° vs 25°, approximately). The half-time of inhibition, defined as the time required for 50% inhibition of the control or pre-cooling rate, varied from 4 to 15 minutes, and the half-time of recovery from 30 to 100 minutes. Maximum inhibition varied from 68 to 92%. Possible uncertainties in evaluating these parameters are discussed. When the duration of the low temperature period was sufficient to permit essentially full recovery, subsequent re-warming of the petiole zone to 25° to 30° effected little or no increase in the translocation rate. It is evident that the interposition between source and sink of a 2 cm petiole zone maintained at a temperature generally inhibitory to physiological processes resulted in little or no impairment to the translocation process, after a suitable thermal adaptation period. Thermally adapted petiole systems de-adapted after periods as short as 1 hour at 25°.
1 Paper No. 733 from the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, and Journal Article No. 102-66, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, Ohio. This Research supported in part by Grants G-24040 and GB-2470 from the National Science Foundation.
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