4.7 Article

Interaction between sugar transport and plant development

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 288, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.jplph.2023.154073

Keywords

Carbohydrates; Development; Fruit; Root; Shoot; Sugar transporter

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This article discusses the important role of sugar transporters in plant organ development and the integration mechanism with plant hormone responses.
Endogenous programs and constant interaction with the environment regulate the development of the plant organism and its individual organs. Sugars are necessary building blocks for plant and organ growth and at the same time act as critical integrators of the metabolic state into the developmental program. There is a growing recognition that the specific type of sugar and its subcellular or tissue distribution is sensed and translated to developmental responses. Therefore, the transport of sugars across membranes is a key process in adapting plant organ properties and overall development to the nutritional state of the plant. In this review, we discuss how plants exploit various sugar transporters to signal growth responses, for example, to control the development of sink organs such as roots or fruits. We highlight which sugar transporters are involved in root and shoot growth and branching, how intracellular sugar allocation can regulate senescence, and, for example, control fruit development. We link the important transport processes to downstream signaling cascades and elucidate the factors responsible for the integration of sugar signaling and plant hormone responses.

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