The import-export transitio in sugar beet leaves (Bets vu*ans) occurred at 40 to 50% leaf expansion and was characterized by loss in assimilate import and Increase in pbotosyntbesis. The metabolsm and partitoning of assimilated and transocated C were determine during leaf development and related to the traslocaton status of the leaf. The It is well established that as a young leaf matures its status changes from an importer to an exporter of photosynthetic assimilates (4, 13, 25). In many dicot species, the import-export transition occurs when the leaf is 40 to 50%o expanded and is characterized by the rapid loss in the ability to import assimilates with the concomitant onset of export function. Autoradiographic studies (4,13, 25) have shown that export initiates at the leaf apex and rapidly develops basipetally. The basipetal source development is correlated with the cessation of assimilate import. The physiological and anatomical events accompanying leaf maturation have been studied in most detail in Populus deltoides (2, 3, 13), Cucurbita pepo (25), and Beta vulgaris (4).Many studies on the import-export conversion have been to distinguish the preparatory events from the causal events ofexport. In this regard, Turgeon and Webb (24, 25) characterized the import-export conversion during leaf development in C. pepo. The basipetal acquisition of export was accompanied by an increased photosynthesis rate, basipetal development of mesophyll intercellular air spaces, synthesis of the transport sugar, stachyose, and structural maturation of the minor veins. These studies suggested that no one system in the development specifically regulated the onset of export but instead the import-export conversion resulted from the integrated maturation of many structural and physiolog- Many of the previous studies have been at the whole-plant level and aimed at elucidating the causal events for export. In this study, the leaf import-export conversion is investigated at the cellular and biochemical level not with the intent of determining the causal event(s) of export but rather to elucidate the processes of sink and source leaf physiology in relation to translocation. The metabolic correlates of leaf maturation were studied both in detached leaves and in the intact translocating sugar beet plant, B. vulgaris. Specifically, the metabolism and partitioning of assimilated and translocated C were characterized during leaf development and related to the translocation status of the leaf. Additionally, the levels ofthe transport sugar, sucrose, and the activities of various sucrose-metabolizing enzymes were determined in source and sink leaves. These results are discussed in terms of intracellular compartmentation of sugars in relation to import and export.MATERIALS AND METHODS B. vulgaris L. (monogerm hybrid, size 3) plants were grown for 8 to 10 weeks in a controlled environment under conditions described previously (8). Four experimental protocols were used in this study: (a) the relationship between leaf import capacity ...