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1.
Cultures of Rhizosolenia formosa H. Peragallo were studied to assess whether or not physiological and optical characteristics of this large diatom were consistent with the ability to migrate vertically in the open ocean. Time-course experiments examined changes in chemical composition and buoyancy of R. formosa during nitrate (N)–replete growth, N starvation, and recovery. Cells could maintain unbalanced growth for at least 53 h after depletion of ambient nitrate. Increases in C:N and carbohydrate: protein ratios observed during N starvation reversed within 24 h of reintroduction of nitrate to culture medium. Buoyancy was related to nutrition: Upon N depletion, the percentage of positively buoyant cells decreased to 4% from 11% but reverted to 9% within 12 h of nitrate readdition. Cells took up nitrate in the dark. Nitrogen-specific uptake rates averaged 0.48 d?1; these rates were higher than N-specific growth rates (0. 15 d?1), indicating the potential for luxury consumption of nitrate, which can be stored for later use. Measurements of photosynthesis vs. irradiance, chlorophyll-specific absorption (aph*(λ)), and pigment composition showed that cells may be adapted for growth under a wide range of irradiances. Values of aph*(λ) were lower for N-depleted cells than for N-replete cells, and N-depleted cells had higher ratios of total carotenoids to chlorophyll a. Aggregation of chloroplasts was more pronounced in N-depleted cells. These are possibly photoprotective mechanisms that would be an advantage to N-depleted cells in surface waters. Compounds that absorb in the ultraviolet region were detected in N-replete cells but were absent in N-depleted cultures. Overall, these results have important implications for migrations of Rhizosolenia in nature. Cells may survive fairly long periods in N-depleted surface waters and will continue to take up carbon; then they can resume nitrate uptake and revert to positive buoyancy upon returning to deep, N-rich water. Uncoupled uptake of carbon and nitrogen during migrations of Rhizosolenia is a form of new production that may result in the net removal of carbon from oceanic surface waters.  相似文献   

2.
In the non-N2-fixing cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum (Agardh) Gomont (strain OH-I-pCl1), N starvation induced an increase in the rate of respiration and a decrease in the rate of O2 evolution. When NO3? was added to illuminated N-starved cells, O2 evolution immediately increased to levels shown by NO3? grown cells, even though N-starved cells had lost most of their in vitro photosynthetic activities. Stimulation of noncyclic electron flow was maximal under light-saturating conditions and after 2–3 days of N starvation. The respiratory rate of N-starved cells was stimulated by the addition of NO3? or NH4+ and partially inhibited at very low irradiances, even in the presence of DCMU (3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea). Results indicate that N-starved cells obtain the energy supply for N assimilation through a process different from that used by N-sufficient cells. N-starved cells were able to take up NO3? in the dark and when illuminated in the presence of DCMU under anaerobiosis. Following NO3? addition, the photosynthetic yield of the in vivo noncyclic electron transport slightly increased, whereas it decreased after NH4+ addition. Addition of NO3? or NH4+ favored photoinhibition of photosystem II, the effect being faster after NH4+ addition.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of nitrogen starvation on biomass composition and photosynthetic function were examined in the marine cryptophyte Rhodomonas sp. Batch-cultured cells in N-sufficient medium showed a 2.5-fold increase in total carbohydrate content, and a 33% increase in cell volume when the cultures reached the stationary growth phase. These cultures also increased the ratio of phycoerythrin (PE)/hydrosoluble proteins from 6 to 22% by the 4th and 10th day of culture, respectively. In contrast, light-saturated photosynthetic activity (Pm) progressively decreased, and the value obtained at the beginning of the stationary phase was about 45% of that obtained for cells in the late exponential growth phase. Transfer to N-lacking medium caused a 3.2-fold increase in cell volume. N starvation also triggered a rapid decline in N-containing compounds such as hydrosoluble proteins and photosynthetic pigments, causing an almost complete loss of PE. The ratio of PE/hydrosoluble proteins decreased from 6 to 1% after 6 d of N deprivation. Furthermore, the PSII fluorescence capacity declined under N-starved conditions, which caused a pronounced decrease in both the Pm (circa 90%) and the apparent photosynthetic efficiency (circa 55%). Under these conditions, photosynthetically fixed carbon was used to synthesize large amounts of carbohydrates. We suggest that, in addition to the role of phycoerythrin as a light-harvesting pigment, Rhodomonas sp. responds to N-depleted conditions by mobilizing combined nitrogen from biliproteins.  相似文献   

4.
When incubated at pH 4–5, Chlorella freshly isolated from symbiosis with Hydra viridissima PALLAS 1766 (green hydra) release large amounts of photosynthetically fixed carbon in the form of maltose, and assimilation of inorganic N is inhibited. Physiological responses to N starvation of the cultured 3N813A strain of maltose-releasing Chlorella differed from those caused by 48 h of maltose release induced by low pH. N starvation increased rates of ammonium assimilation at pH 7.0 in light or darkness, and ammonium assimilation in darkness stimulated cell respiration. In contrast, cells pretreated at pH 5.0 to induce maltose release were unable to take up ammonium at pH 7.0 unless supplied with an external carbon source such as bicarbonate, acetate, or succinate, and rates of uptake were similar to control cells. Freshly isolated symbionts displayed a similar dependency. Rates of ammonium uptake by cells pretreated at pH 5.0 were reduced in darkness and did not stimulate cell respiration. N-starved cells supplied with ammonium also showed a large short-term increase in glutamine pools at the expense of glutamate, as might be expected if large amounts of ammonium were rapidly assimilated via glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase, whereas after long-term maltose release cells showed only a small increase in glutamine when supplied with ammonium. Furthermore, maltose release caused a fall in pool sizes of a number of amino acids, including glutamine and glutamate, and also caused a decrease in pool sizes of 2-oxoglutarate and phospho-enol-pyruvate, which are required for ammonium assimilation into amino acids. Cells stimulated to synthesize and release maltose may be unable to assimilate ammonium and synthesize amino acids because of diversion of fixed carbon from N metabolism. We estimate that 40–50% affixed C is required for maximal maltose synthesis, whereas up to 30% fixed C is required for ammonium assimilation. These results are discussed in the context of host regulation of symbiotic algal growth.  相似文献   

5.
In exponentially growing cells of Synechococcus sp. 6301, over 95% of the phycobiliproteins are located in phycobilisomes, and the remainder is present in the form of low molecular weight aggregates. In addition to the subunits of the phycobiliproteins (C-phycocyanin, allophycocyanin, allophycocyanin B), the phycobilisomes of this unicellular cyanobacterium contain five non-pigmented polypeptides. During the initial phase of starvation (24 h after removal of combined nitrogen from the growth medium), the phycobiliproteins in the low molecular weight fraction largely disappeared. Phycocyanin was lost more rapidly from this fraction than allophycocyanin. Simultaneous changes in the phycobilisome were (1) a decrease in sedimentation coefficient, (2) a decrease in phycocyanin: allophycocyanin ratio, (3) a shift in the fluorescence emission maximum from 673 to 676 nm, and (4) a selective complete loss of a 30,000 dalton non-pigmented polypeptide. Upon extensive nitrogen starvation (72 h), the intracellular level of phycocyanin decreased by over 30-fold. These results indicate that in the early stage of nitrogen starvation, the free phycobiliproteins of the cell are degraded, as well as a significant proportion of the phycocyanin from the periphery of the phycobilisome. However, the structures partially depleted of phycocyanin still function efficiently in energy transfer. On extended starvation, total degradation of residual phycobilisomes takes place, possibly in conjunction with the detachment of these structures from the thylakoids.None of the effects of the absence of combined nitrogen were seen when cells were starved in the presence of chloramphenicol, or in a methionine auxotroph starved for methionine.Abbreviations Used NaK-PO4 NaH2PO4 titrated with K2HPO4 to a given pH - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - Tris Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

6.
Partitioning of the carbon (C) fixed during photosynthesis between neutral lipids (NL) and carbohydrates was investigated in Isochrysis sp. (Haptophyceae) in relation to its nitrogen (N) status. Using batch and nitrate‐limited continuous cultures, we studied the response of these energy reserve pools to both conditions of N starvation and limitation. During N starvation, NL and carbohydrate quotas increased but their specific growth rates (specific rates of variation, μCAR and μNL) decreased. When cells were successively deprived and then resupplied with NO3, both carbohydrates and neutral lipids were inversely related to the N quota (N:C). These negative relationships were not identical during N impoverishment and replenishment, indicating a hysteresis phenomenon between N and C reserve mobilizations. Cells acclimated to increasing degrees of N limitation in steady‐state chemostat cultures showed decreasing NL quota and increasing carbohydrate quota. N starvation led to a visible but only transient increase of NL productivity. In continuous cultures, the highest NL productivity was obtained for the highest experimented dilution rate (D = 1.0 d?1; i.e., for non N‐limited growth conditions), whereas the highest carbohydrate productivity was obtained at D = 0.67 d?1. We used these results to discuss the nitrogen conditions that optimize NL productivities in the context of biofuel production.  相似文献   

7.
A planktonic alga similar in general morphology and pigments to Aureococcus anophagefferens Hargraves and Sieburth has caused persistent and ecologically damaging blooms along the south Texas coast. Experiments using 100 μM NO3?, NO2?, and NH4+ demonstrated that the alga could not use NO3? for growth but could use NO2? and NH4+. Doubling iron or trace metal concentrations did not permit growth on NO3?. Chemical composition data for cultures grown in excess NO3? or NH4+, respectively, were as follows: N·cell?1 (0.88 vs. 1.3 pg), C:N ratio (25:1 vs. 6.4:1), C:chlorophyll a (chl a) (560:1 vs. 44:1), and chl a·cell?1 (0.033 vs. 0.16 pg). These data imply that cells supplied with NO3? were N-starved. Culture addition of 10 mM final concentration chlorate (a nitrate analog) did not affect the Texas isolate while NO3? utilizing A. anophagefferens was lysed, suggesting that the NO3? reductase of the Texas isolate is nonfunctional. Rates of primary productivity determined during a dense bloom indicated that light-saturated growth rates were ca. 0.45 d?1, which is similar to maximum rates determined in laboratory experiments (0.58 d?1± 0.16). However, chemical composition data were consistent with the growth rate of these cells being limited by N availability (C:N 28, C:chl a 176, chl a·cell?1 0.019). Calculations based on a mass balance for nitrogen suggest that the bloom was triggered by an input of ca. 69 μM NH4+ that resulted from an extensive die-off of benthos and fish.  相似文献   

8.
Effect of carbon starvation on the rate of dihexylsulfosuccinate (DHSS) biotransformation byComamonas terrigena was determined. The protein content during the starvation was stable in all variants and did not change during the transformation cycle. All starved cultures exhibited a higher biotransformation rate than a non-starved control. Cells ofC. terrigena exposed for 16 h in media with no C source showed the highest specific biotransformation rate (144% of the non-starved culture). Extension of the starvation to 2 d led to a decrease of the rate to close to that found in non-starved cells.  相似文献   

9.
Algal lipids are ideal biofuel sources. Our objective was to determine the contributors to triacylglycerol (TAG) accumulation and lipid body formation in Chlorella UTEX29 under nitrogen (N) deprivation. A fivefold increase in intracellular lipids following N starvation for 24 h confirmed the oleaginous characteristics of UTEX29. Ultrastructural studies revealed increased number of lipid bodies and decreased starch granules in N-starved cells compared to N-replete cells. Lipid bodies were observed as early as 3 h after N removal and plastids collapsed after 48 h of stress. Moreover, the identification of intracellular pyrenoids and differences in the expected nutritional requirements for Chlorella protothecoides (as UTEX29 is currently classified) led us to conduct a phylogenetic study using 18S and actin cDNA sequences. This indicated UTEX29 to be more phylogenetically related to Chlorella vulgaris. To investigate the fate of different lipids after N starvation, radiolabeling using 14C-acetate was used. A significant decrease in 14C-galactolipids and phospholipids matched the increase in 14C-TAG starting at 3 h of N starvation, consistent with acyl groups from structural lipids as sources for TAG under N starvation. These results have important implications for the identification of key steps controlling oil accumulation in N-starved biofuel algae and demonstrate membrane recycling during lipid body formation.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Four cytokinins (CKs), indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and its ester and amino conjugates, and abscisic acid (ABA) levels of two bromeliads, Ananas comosus (L.) Merril and Vriesea gigantea Gaudich., grown in 5 mM (NH4)2SO4 or urea as the sole nitrogen (N) form, were investigated. In both bromeliads, zeatin (Z) and zeatin riboside ([9R]Z) were the most abundant CKs. In A. comosus, CKs levels decreased drastically (≊ 12 times) after 7 and 30 d in media with ammonium and urea, respectively. After 3 d in media with N, V. gigantea CK levels decreased 30 and 20 times in the presence of ammonium and urea, respectively. N-starved A. comosus and V. gigantea exhibited similar ABA levels, but ABA decreased faster in V. gigantea when plants were transferred to media with N. Free IAA levels decreased until the 15th and 30th day when A. comosus was transferred to a medium with ammonium and urea, respectively. N-starved A. comosus amide, ester, and free IAA amounted to 81%, 14%, and 4%, respectively. There was a transient increase in the proportion of amide IAA and a corresponding decrease of the ester and the free IAA proportion when N-starved plants were transferred to media with N. The relationship between the internal hormonal patterns and the different ecological adaptations of the two bromeliads are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
《Aquatic Botany》2010,92(4):291-297
The effects of nitrogen starvation on biomass composition and photosynthetic function were examined in the marine cryptophyte Rhodomonas sp. Batch-cultured cells in N-sufficient medium showed a 2.5-fold increase in total carbohydrate content, and a 33% increase in cell volume when the cultures reached the stationary growth phase. These cultures also increased the ratio of phycoerythrin (PE)/hydrosoluble proteins from 6 to 22% by the 4th and 10th day of culture, respectively. In contrast, light-saturated photosynthetic activity (Pm) progressively decreased, and the value obtained at the beginning of the stationary phase was about 45% of that obtained for cells in the late exponential growth phase. Transfer to N-lacking medium caused a 3.2-fold increase in cell volume. N starvation also triggered a rapid decline in N-containing compounds such as hydrosoluble proteins and photosynthetic pigments, causing an almost complete loss of PE. The ratio of PE/hydrosoluble proteins decreased from 6 to 1% after 6 d of N deprivation. Furthermore, the PSII fluorescence capacity declined under N-starved conditions, which caused a pronounced decrease in both the Pm (circa 90%) and the apparent photosynthetic efficiency (circa 55%). Under these conditions, photosynthetically fixed carbon was used to synthesize large amounts of carbohydrates. We suggest that, in addition to the role of phycoerythrin as a light-harvesting pigment, Rhodomonas sp. responds to N-depleted conditions by mobilizing combined nitrogen from biliproteins.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of growth irradiance on the non-steady-state relationship between photosynthesis and tissue carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) pools in Chaetomorpha linum (Muller) Kutzing in response to abrupt changes in external nitrogen (N) availability was determined in laboratory experiments. For a given thallus N content, algae acclimated to low irradiance consistently had a higher rate of light-saturated photosynthesis (Pmax normalized to dry weight) than algae acclimated to saturating irradiance; for both treatments, Pmax was correlated to thallus N. Both Pmax and the photosynthetic efficiency (αdw) were correlated in C. linum grown at either saturating or limiting irradiance over the range of experimental conditions, indicating that variations in electron transport were coupled to variations in C-fixation capacity despite the large range of tissue N content from 1.1% to 4.8%. Optimizing both α and Pmax and thereby acclimating to an intermediate light level may be a general characteristic of thin-structured opportunistic algae that confers a competitive advantage in estuarine environments in which both light and nutrient conditions are highly variable. Nitrogen-saturated algae had the same photosynthesis–irradiance relationship regardless of light level. When deprived of an external N supply, photosynthetic rates did not change in C. linum acclimated to low irradiance despite a two-fold decrease in tissue N content, suggesting that the active pools of chlorophyll and Rubisco remained constant. Both α and Pmax decreased immediately and continuously in algae acclimated to high irradiance on removal of the N supply even though tissue N content was relatively high during most of the N-starvation period, indicating a diversion of energy and reductant away from C fixation to support high growth rates. Carbon and nitrogen assimilation were equally balanced in algae in both light treatments throughout the N-saturation and -depletion phases, except when protein synthesis was limited by the depletion of internal N reserves in severely N-starved high-light algae and excess C accumulated as starch stores. This suggests that the ability for short-term adjustment of internal allocation to acquire N andC in almost constant proportions may be especially beneficial to macroalgae living in environments characterized by high variability in light levels and nutrient supply.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrogen uptake rates were measured as a function of time following saturating additions (15 μMg-at N·?1) of 15N-labelid ammonium, urea, and nitrate to N-starved cultures of the picoflagellate Micromonas pusilla Butcher. Uptake rates were estimated from both the accumulation of 15N into the cells and the disappearance of nitrogen from the medium. Transient elevated (surge) uptake rates of NH4+ and urea were observed after enrichment. During the first 5 min the initial urea and NH4+ uptake rates were 2- and 4-fold greater than the maximum growth rate (μMmax)observed prior to No3? depletion in the cultures. The elevated urea uptake rates declined quickly to a relatively constant value, whereas the initial rates of NH4+ uptake declined rapidly but were followed by a subsequent increase prior to remaining roughly constant. Nitrate was not taken up as readily by N-starved M. pusilla as the reduced N forms. Although NO3+ uptake commenced immediately after enrichment (i.e. no lag period) the N-Specific rate over the next 6 h averaged half the μMmax observed during NO3? replete conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Survival of stressed Escherichia coli with or without the rpoS gene was assessed after 2 and 6 days in sterile seawater. Cells were submitted to thermal (48°C), acidic (pH 5.1), oxidative (H2O2 1mm), nutritional (C, N, P starvation), or osmotic (NaCl 0.5m) stresses for periods ranging from 0 to 4 h. We found a stress-mediated cross protection against seawater relative to controls. Viability was higher when cells were acid, oxidatively, nutritionally or osmotically stressed. Survival increased in cells stressed at 37°C as compared with 20°C. With the exception of osmotic stress, we found that this stress-induced cross protection was rpoS dependent.Correspondence to: P.M. Munro.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of nitrate, phosphate, and iron starvation and resupply on photosynthetic pigments, selected photosynthetic proteins, and photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry were examined in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin (CCMP 1327). Although cell chlorophyll a (chl a) content decreased in nutrient-starved cells, the ratios of light-harvesting accessory pigments (chl c and fucoxanthin) to chl a were unaffected by nutrient starvation. The chl a-specific light absorpition coefficient (a*) and the functional absorption cross-section of PSII (σ) increased during nutrient starvation, consistent with reduction of intracellular self-shading (i.e. a reduction of the “package effect”) as cells became chlorotic. The light-harvesting complex proteins remained a constant proportion of total cell protein during nutrient starvation, indicating that chlorosis mirrored a general reduction in cell protein content. The ratio of the xanthophylls cycle pigments diatoxanthin and diadinoxanthin to chl a increased during nutrient starvation. These pigments are thought to play a photo-protective role by increasing dissipation of excitation energy in the pigment bed upstream from the reaction centers. Despite the increase in diatoxanthin and diadinoxanthin, the efficiency of PSII photochemistry, as measured by the ration of variable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) of dark-adapted cells, declined markedly under nitrate and iron starvation and moderately under phosphate starvation. Parallel to changes in Fv/Fm were decreases in abundance of the reaction center protein D1 consistent with damage of PSII reaction centers in nutrient-starved cells. The relative abundance of the carboxylating enzyme, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RUBISCO), decreased in response to nitrate and iron starvation but not phosphate starvation. Most marked was the decline in the abundance of the small subunit of RUBISCO in nitrate-starved cells. The changes in pigment content and fluorescence characteristics were typically reversed within 24 h of resupply of the limiting nutrient.  相似文献   

16.
Iron starvation induced marked increases in flavodoxin abundance and decreases in light-saturated and light-limited photosynthesis rates in the diatom Chaetoceros muelleri. Consistent with the substitution of flavodoxin for ferredoxin as an early response to iron starvation, increases of flavodoxin abundance were observed before declines of cell division rate or chl a specific photosynthesis rates. Changes in the abundance of flavodoxin after the addition of iron to iron-starved cells indicated that flavodoxin was not actively degraded under iron-replete conditions. Greater declines in light-saturated oxygen evolution rates than dark oxygen consumption rates indicated that the mitochondrial electron transfer chain was not affected as greatly by iron starvation as the photosynthetic electron transfer chain. The carbon:nitrogen ratio was unaffected by iron starvation, suggesting that photosynthetic electron transfer was a primary target of iron starvation and that reductions in nitrate assimilation were due to energy limitation (the C:N ratio would be expected to rise under nitrogen-limited but energy-replete conditions). Parallel changes were observed in the maximum light-saturated photosynthesis rate and the light-limited initial slope of the photosynthesis-light curve during iron starvation and recovery. The lowest photosynthesis rates were observed in iron-starved cells and the highest values in iron-replete cells. The light saturation parameter, Ik, was not affected by iron starvation, nor was the chl-to-C ratio markedly reduced. These observations were consistent with iron starvation having a similar or greater effect on photochemical charge separation in PSII than on downstream electron transfer steps. Declines of the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence in iron-starved cells were consistent with PSII being a primary target of iron starvation. The functional cross-section of PSII was affected only marginally (<20%) by iron starvation, with the largest values observed in iron-starved cells. The rate constant for electron transfer calculated from fast repetition rate fluorescence was found to covary with the light-saturated photosynthesis rate; it was lowest in the most severely starved cells.  相似文献   

17.
The relationship between the requirement for boron and the form of N supplied in nutrient media to cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 was investigated. When cells were grown in a medium which contained nitrate or ammonium-N, boron deficiency in the nutrient media did not inhibit growth or change cell composition. However, when cells were dependent on N2 fixation, the lack of boron inhibited growth (i.e. growth ceased after 96 hours under these conditions). Additionally, boron-deficient cells showed a significant decrease in their content of phycobiliproteins and chlorophyll and accumulated carbohydrates within 24 hours of removing boron from the nutrient media. Inhibition of photosynthetic O2 evolution accompanied the decrease in photosynthetic pigments. Boron deficiency symptoms were relieved when either boron or combined N was added to boron-deficient cultures. The degree of recovery depended upon the age of the cultures. Assays of nitrogenase activity showed that, after 2 hours of growth, nitrogenase activity of boron-deficient cells was inhibited by 40%. After 24 hours a total inactivation of nitrogenase activity was observed in boron-deficient cells. These results strongly suggest an involvement of boron in N2 fixation in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

18.
The combined effects of light intensity and nitrogen (NO3?) on growth rate, pigment content, and biochemical composition of Gracilaria foliifera v. angustissima (Harvey) Taylor was investigated using outdoor continuous cultures. Growth of Gracilaria increased linearly with increasing light to 0.43 doublings d?1 at high light levels (383 ly d?1 of in situ light), suggesting that light may often limit growth of this plant in nature. Chlorophyll a and phycoerythrin contents were inversely proportional to light level and growth rate. However, pigment content did not affect the growth capacity of Gracilaria. There was no increase in growth or pigment content with increasing additions of nitrogen. The low nitrogen treatment was unenriched seawater that had higher NO3? levels than most coastal waters (influent = 8.61 μM; residual = 0.94 μM). When growing near its maximum rate under high light intensities, Gracilaria had a significantly (P < 0.001) lower phycoerythrin: chlorophyll a ratio (phyco: Chl a) than did Gracilaria growing more slowly under lower light (Phyco:Chl a of 2.8 ± 0.2 vs. 3.8 ± 0.3). Faster growing plants also had C:N ratios above 10, indicating N- limitation. In addition to harvesting light the phycobiliproteins of Gracilaria may store nitrogen. Growth rates of Gracilaria correlated negatively with ash (r =–0.85) and positively with the carbon: phycoerythrin ratio (r = 0.85), suggesting that these two indices can be used to estimate growth in the field.  相似文献   

19.
Nitrate, ammonia, urea, and glycine were compared as nitrogen sources for Acetabularia mediterranea. Cells grew normally in media containing nitrate or urea, while cells did not grow at all when the same amount of N was supplied as ammonium ion. The utilization of glycine remains questionable. Cells in medium without added N (NDM) increased in length and some formed reproductive caps. The whorls of vegetative cells showed considerable hypertrophy in NDM and in glycine. This hypertrophy was due to the elongation of only the first-(a1) and second- (a2) order articles. When cut, the basal portion of cells without added N regenerated new apices with whorls. The development of these whorls was inversely proportional to the NO2 concentration. Analyses showed that the intracellular nitrogen pool in young cells and regenerating bases was very small, about 1/10 of that of fully grown cells. Therefore we suggest that trace amounts of N contaminants in the medium supported growth and development, the uptake of which was facilitated by the hypertrophied whorls, under N-limited conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Carbon and nitrogen balance in Acorus calamus, a wetland species colonising littoral zones with a high trophic status, was studied under experimental conditions using water or sand culture with a defined composition of the nutrient solution. Influence of graded level of N (1.86, 7.5 and 18.6 mM) and/or forms of N (NH4+ versus NO 3) on the content of non-structural carbohydrates, free amino acids, total C, and total N was studied in Acorus rhizomes and roots to find possible connection with a reduced growth of Acorus plants under high N and NH4+–N nutrition described in our previous study [Vojtíšková et al., 2004. Hydrobiologia 518: 9–22]. High N availability and pure NH4+–N nutrition affected the C/N balance of rhizome and root systems of Acorus in a similar way. NH4+–N was the only form of N elevated under the high N treatment. The major proportion of the total non-structural carbohydrates (TNC) was starch (91–93% and 51–64% in rhizomes and roots, respectively). The content of starch was significantly and and negatively affected by high N availability (P = 0.001), as well as by NH4+–N nutrition (P=0.001). Amounts of simple soluble carbohydrates (sucrose, glucose, and fructose) were negligible in comparison to starch in rhizomes and branched roots (up to 5% of TNC), while roots without developed lateral roots (unbranched) contained up to 33% of TNC in the form of simple soluble sugars. Moreover, high hexoses/sucrose ratio, low starch/soluble sugars ratio, high content of N, and low C/N ratio support the notion that unbranched roots are metabolically active young roots with tissue differentiation in progress. A high content of free amino acids, typically with dominance of N-rich amino acids (Arg-46%, Gln-8%, Asn-7%), was found simultaneously with a low carbohydrate content under high N supply, which indicates that NH4+ received is effectively incorporated into the organic form by this species. Since the decrease in carbohydrate content was not accompanied by luxurious growth, other possible carbon consuming processes were discussed in relation to NH4+ nutrition. More dramatic changes in total N than C were found under high N availability resulting a shift in C/N ratio in favour of N. Although the shift towards N metabolism was obvious, no serious carbohydrate depletion occurred, which could explain the reduced growth of Acorus plants under high N and sole NH4+–N nutrition described previously.  相似文献   

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