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The Physiology of Flowering Plants - KHAM PHA MOI

The Physiology of Flowering Plants - KHAM PHA MOI

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156 TRANSLOCATION OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDSComplementary readingEsau, K. & Cheadle, V. I. Size <strong>of</strong> pores and their contents in sieve elements <strong>of</strong>dicotyledons. Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the National Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences (USA), 45 (1959),156–62.Fisher, D. B. <strong>The</strong> estimation <strong>of</strong> sugar concentration in individual sieve-tubeelements by negative staining. Planta, 139 (1978), 19–24.Fisher, D. B. & Cash-Clark, C. E. Sieve tube unloading and post-phloemtransport <strong>of</strong> fluorescent tracers and proteins injected into sieve tubes viasevered aphid stylets. Plant <strong>Physiology</strong>, 123 (2000), 125–37.Flowers, T. J. & Yeo, A. R. Solute Transport in <strong>Plants</strong>. London: Blackie/Chapman &Hall, 1992.Golecki, B., Schulz, A., Carstens-Behrens, U. & Kollmann, R. Evidence <strong>of</strong> grafttransmission <strong>of</strong> structural phloem proteins or their precursors in heterografts<strong>of</strong> Cucurbitaceae. Planta, 206 (1998), 630–40.Haupt, S., Duncan, G. H., Holzberg, S. & Oparka, K. J. Evidence for symplasticunloading in sink leaves <strong>of</strong> barley. Plant <strong>Physiology</strong>, 125 (2001), 209–18.Köckenberger, W., Pope, J. M., Xia, Y., Jeffrey, K. R., Komor, E. & Callaghan, P.T. A non-invasive measurement <strong>of</strong> phloem and xylem water flow in castorbean seedlings by nuclear magnetic resonance microimaging. Planta, 201(1997), 53–63.Mauseth, J. D. Plant Anatomy. Menlo Park, CA: Benjamin/Cummings, 1988.Patrick, J. W. Phloem unloading: sieve element unloading and post-sieveelement transport. Annual Review <strong>of</strong> Plant <strong>Physiology</strong> and Plant Molecular Biology,48 (1997), 191–222.Pickard, B. G. & Beachy, R. N. Intercellular connections are developmentallycontrolled to help move molecules through the plant. Cell, 98 (1999), 5–8.Sasaki, T., Chino, M., Hayashi, H. & Fujiwara, T. Detection <strong>of</strong> several mRNAspecies in rice phloem sap. Plant and Cell <strong>Physiology</strong>, 39 (1998), 895–7.Sideman, E. J. & Scheirer, D. C. Some fine structural observations on developingand mature sieve elements in the brown alga Laminaria saccharina.American Journal <strong>of</strong> Botany, 64 (1977), 649–57.Sweetlove, L. J. & Hill, S. A. Source metabolism dominates the control <strong>of</strong>source to sink carbon flux in tuberizing potato plants throughout thediurnal cycle and under a range <strong>of</strong> environmental conditions. Plant, Cell andEnvironment, 23 (2000), 523–9.van Bel, A. J. E. <strong>The</strong> phloem, a miracle <strong>of</strong> ingenuity. Plant, Cell and Environment,26 (2003), 125–49.van Bel, A. J. E. & Gamalei, Y. V. Ecophysiology <strong>of</strong> phloem loading in sourceleaves. Plant, Cell and Environment, 15 (1992), 265–70.Versch, J., Kalusche, B., Köhler, J. et al. <strong>The</strong> kinetics <strong>of</strong> sucrose concentrationin the phloem <strong>of</strong> individual vascular bundles <strong>of</strong> the Ricinus communis seedlingmeasured by nuclear magnetic resonance. Planta, 205 (1998), 132–9.Wark,M.C.Finestructure<strong>of</strong>thephloem<strong>of</strong>Pisum sativum. II. <strong>The</strong> companion celland phloem parenchyma. Australian Journal <strong>of</strong> Botany, 13 (1965), 185–93.Wark, M. C. & Chambers, T. C. Fine structure <strong>of</strong> the phloem <strong>of</strong> Pisum sativum. I.<strong>The</strong> sieve element ontogeny. Australian Journal <strong>of</strong> Botany, 13 (1965), 171–83.

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