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The study of solute transport in plants dates back to the
beginnings of experimental plant physiology, but has its origins in
the much earlier interests of humankind in agriculture. Given this
lineage, it is not surprising that there have been many books on
the transport of solutes in plants; texts on the closely related
subject of mineral nutrition also commonly address the topic of ion
transport. Why another book? Well, physiologists continue to make
new discoveries. Particularly pertinent is the characterisation of
enzymes that are able to transport protons across membranes during
the hydrolysis of energy-rich bonds. These enzymes, which include
the H + -A TPases, are now known to be crucial for solute transport
in plants and we have given them due emphasis. From an academic
point of view, the transport systems in plants are now appreciated
as worthy of study in their own right-not just as an extension of
those systems already much more widely investigated in animals.
From a wider perspective, understanding solute transport in plants
is fundamental to understanding plants and the extent to which they
can be manipulated for agricultural purposes. As physiologists
interested in the mechanisms of transport, we first set out in this
book to examine the solutes in plants and where are they located.
Our next consideration was to provide the tools by which solute
movement can be understood: a vital part of this was to describe
membranes and those enzymes catalysing transport.
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