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CHAPTER 30.5 How Do Organic Compounds Move Through Plants? AP Biology Spring 2011 CONDUCTING TUBES IN PHLOEM Phloem: living vascular tissue with organized arrays of conducting tubes, fibers, and parenchyma cells CONDUCTING TUBES IN PHLOEM Sieve tube cells: alive at maturity and are interconnected side by side and end to end from the roots to the leaves Companion cells: located next to sieve tubes and function to actively transport the products of photosynthesis into the sieve tubes CONDUCTING TUBES IN PHLOEM Carbohydrates are mainly stored as insoluble starch molecules that must be converted to more soluble carbohydrates Such as sucrose before being transported throughout the plant TRANSLOCATION Translocation: transport of sucrose and other compounds through phloem Movement of molecules through phloem is from sources to sinks Source: mostly leaves Sink: flowers and fruits TRANSLOCATION Observations of plant-sucking insects demonstrates that the sugary fluid in the phloem is under high pressure TRANSLOCATION Pressure flow theory: translocation depends on pressure gradients Solutes are loaded by active transport into the phloem from a source (ex. Leaves) Water enters by osmosis due to increase in solutes Pressure builds in sieve tubes pushing the sucroseladen fluid out of the source, into the stems, and on the sink (ex. Fruit)