Uptake, translocation and metabolism of 14C-labelled formaldehyde in the leaves of Epipremnum aureum (Golden
Potho) and Ficus benjamina (Weeping Fig) were investigated. Plants were exposed in light and dark to 14C-formaldehyde (500 μg m−3) in gas exposure chambers. The amount of 14C-incorporation into the soluble (water-extractable) and insoluble fractions of leaves, stem sections and roots was determined. The soluble 14C-activity
was fractionated by ion exchange chromatography followed by thin-layer chromatography/autoradiography.
Approximately 60–70% of the applied 14C-formaldehyde was recovered from the plants. In the light about five
times more 14C-formaldehyde was assimilated than in the dark. The amount of 14C-label derived from 14C-formaldehyde, which was incorporated into acid-stable metabolites, was enhanced to an even larger extent in the
light. The 14C-activity pattern closely resembled the general labelling spectrum of photosynthates, obtained after
a 14CO2 exposure. A substantial amount of labelled material, mostly sucrose, was translocated into the stems and
roots. Our results suggest that in the light 14C enters the Calvin cycle after an enzymatic two-step oxidation process
of 14C-formaldehyde to 14CO2. The activities of the respective enzymes, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate
dehydrogenase, were determined. Among 27 ‘leafy’ indoor decorative plants, a screening experiment revealed no
outstanding species with regard to its capacity for metabolism of formaldehyde, and rate of uptake through stomata
was too low to justify claims that plants contribute usefully to indoor air purification.