tiles


Note:  Do not rely on this information. It is very old.

Sugar

Sugar is formed in plant-cells as one of the earliest products of assimilation. It may possibly originate in the polymerisation of formic aldehyde, according to the equation:-

xCO2 + xH2O = xCH2O + xO2.

According to the recent researches of Messrs. Brown and Morris, the first sugar to be thus synthesised belongs to the saccharon or cane-sugar C12H22O11) group. This acts apparently as a temporary reserve-material in the leaf until it passes a certain degree of concentration, when the more stable starch is formed, the first visible product. The cane-sugar passes into dextrose and levulose:-

C12H22O11 + H2O = C6H12O6 + C6H12O6.

Of these two, dextrose is apparently more quickly used up for respiration, and perhaps also for tissue-forming, so that most of the sugar that passes out of the leaf is levulose. The starch is translocated as maltose (C12H22O11). Cane-sugar also occurs undoubtedly as a reserve-material in stems and roots, so that Sachs' summary of observations on the beet, "starch in the leaf, glucose in the petiole, cane-sugar in the root," might perhaps be modified into "cane-sugar, with starch as surplus, in the leaf, levulose in the petiole, and cane-sugar and starch in the axis."