This was a great "cutting edge science" article on flowering I ran into on that site, along with many others. Essentially Tre6P is the "insulin" of plants, and helps to "pull" the sucrose though the cell walls like a hook. Tres6P is a phosphate complex.
Trehalose 6-phosphate (), the intermediate of trehalose biosynthesis, is an essential signal metabolite in plants, linking growth and development to carbon status. The Suc-Tre6P nexus model postulates that is both a signal and negative feedback regulator ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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I've been titrating a fair amount of simple acids into my solutions of late, also playing around with various ratio's of sugars, hormones, auxins, cytokinin, enzymes, vitamins and cofactors, depending on developmental cycle. More so during flowering, so getting that solution dialed in every time, correctly, especially if anything complex is added in. Then I allow everything to sit for hours up to 24 hours, allowing the pH to reset itself. ie. If any enzymes are added along with proteins, fatty acids, carbs/sugars, or
terpenes.
One of my other new sugars I've been toying with is d-ribose,aka ((2
R,3
R,4
S,5
R)-5-(hydroxymethyl)oxolane-2,3,4-triol) because of it's role in flowering and because
deoxyribose derivative found in DNA differs from ribose by having a
hydrogen atom in place of the
hydroxyl group at C2'. This hydroxyl group performs a function in
RNA splicing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA_splicing
.
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