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October 22, 2014

National Chemistry Week puts spotlight on 'sweet' plant development

This week, in celebration of National Chemistry Week and its theme of the Sweet Side of Chemistry: Candy, NSF salutes sugar molecules that can be far more than just "sweet." Sucrose is table sugar--that ubiquitous sweet white crystal that sweetens our tea, coffee and apple pies, yet is also the villain that causes tooth decay and other health troubles.

Through its Biological Sciences Directorate, NSF has funded Brian Ayre from the University of North Texas who studied the way sucrose produced in plant leaves through photosynthesis moved to and affected plant tissues. Sucrose is transported to tissues that are growing or accumulating storage reserves that can significantly increase productivity, so understanding this process better could have meaningful implications on plant cultivation.

Credit: NSF


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