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1.
Diurnal changes in nitrogen assimilation of tobacco roots.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
To gain an insight into the diurnal changes of nitrogen assimilation in roots the in vitro activities of cytosolic and plasma membrane-bound nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1), nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1) and cytosolic and plastidic glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) were studied. Simultaneously, changes in the contents of total protein, nitrate, nitrite, and ammonium were followed. Roots of intact tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun) were extracted every 3 h during a diurnal cycle. Nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase and glutamine synthetase were active throughout the day-night cycle. Two temporarily distinct peaks of nitrate reductase were detected: during the day a peak of soluble nitrate reductase in the cytosol, in the dark phase a peak of plasma membrane-bound nitrate reductase in the apoplast. The total activities of nitrate reduction were similar by day and night. High activities of nitrite reductase prevented the accumulation of toxic amounts of nitrite throughout the entire diurnal cycle. The resulting ammonium was assimilated by cytosolic glutamine synthetase whose two activity peaks, one in the light period and one in the dark, closely followed those of nitrate reductase. The contribution of plastidic glutamine synthetase was negligible. These results strongly indicate that nitrate assimilation in roots takes place at similar rates day and night and is thus differently regulated from that in leaves.  相似文献   

2.
Nitrate reductase activity and protein concentration of two populas clones   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Nitrate reductase activity and protein percentage of various tree parts of two Populus clones were determined in relation to nitrate ion activity. Nitrogen was supplied as NH(4)NO(3) in a nutriculture system. Wisconsin-5 had significantly greater nitrate reductase activity than Tristis No. 1. Protein percentages of leaf plastochron index 10 leaves (tenth leaf below first leaf lamina exceeding 20 mm in length), bottom leaves, and roots in relation to nitrate ion activity were not appreciably different between clones. The nitrate reductase activity and protein percentage of Tristis No. 1 apex started to level off at the same nitrate ion activity, about 0.09 mm. In Wisconsin-5 apex protein percentage continued to increase at nitrate ion activities where nitrate reductase activity decreases sharply, suggesting that protein nitrogen was being supplied by ammonium ion. The difference in nitrate reductase activity between clones was probably due to genetically determined ability to synthesize nitrate reductase in response to nitrate ion. The expression of nitrate reductase activity was not an index of nitrogen assimilation ability but may be a useful index of growth potential when nitrate ion does not limit nitrate reductase synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
When tobacco is provided with a high nitrate supply, only a small amount of the nitrate taken up by the roots is immediately assimilated inside the roots, while the majority is transported to the leaves where it is reduced to ammonium. To elucidate the importance of root nitrate assimilation, tobacco plants have been engineered that showed no detectable nitrate reductase activity in the roots. These plants expressed the nitrate reductase structural gene nia2 under control of the leaf-specific potato promoter ST-LS1 in the nitrate reductase-mutant Nia30 of Nicotiana tabacum. Homozygous T2-transformants grown in sand or hydroponics with 5.1 mM nitrate had approximately 55-70% of wild-type nitrate reductase acivity in leaves, but lacked nitrate reductase acivity in roots. These plants showed a retarded growth as compared with wild-type plants. The activation state of nitrate reductase was unchanged; however, diurnal variation of nitrate reductase acivity was not as pronounced as in wild-type plants. The transformants had higher levels of nitrate in the leaves and reduced amounts of glutamine both in leaves and roots, while roots showed higher levels of hexoses (3-fold) and sucrose (10-fold). It may be concluded that the loss of nitrate reductase acivity in the roots changes the allocation of reduced nitrogen compounds and sugars in the plant. These plants will be a useful tool for laboratories studying nitrate assimilation and its interactions with carbon metabolism.  相似文献   

4.
Barley plants (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Mazurka) were grown inaerated solution cultures with 2 mM or 8 mM inorganic nitrogensupplied as nitrate alone, ammonium alone or 1:1 nitrate+ammonium.Activities of the principal inorganic nitrogen assimilatoryenzymes and nitrogen transport were measured. Activities ofnitrate and nitrite reductases, glutamine synthetase and glutamatesynthase were greater in leaves than in roots but glutamatedehydrogenase was most active in roots. Only nitrate and nitritereductases changed notably (4–10 times) in response tothe different nitrogen treatments. Nitrate reductase appearedto be rate-limiting for nitrate assimilation to glutamate inroots and also in leaves, where its total in vitro activitywas closely related to nitrate flux in the xylem sap and wasslightly in excess of that needed to reduce the transportednitrate. Xylem nitrate concentration was 13 times greater thanthat in the nutrient solution. Ammonium nitrogen was assimilatedalmost completely in the roots and the small amount releasedinto the xylem sap was similar for the nitrate and the ammoniumtreatments. The presence of ammonium in the nutrient decreasedboth export of nitrate to the xylem and its accumulation inleaves and roots. Nitrate was stored in stem bases and was releasedto the xylem and thence to the leaves during nitrogen starvation.In these experiments, ammonium was assimilated principally inthe roots and nitrate in the leaves. Any advantage of this divisionof function may depend partly on total conversion of inorganicnitrogen to amino acids when nitrate and ammonium are givenin optimal concentrations. Hordeum vulgare L., barley, nitrate, ammonium, nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase, glutamate dehydrogenase, nitrogen transport  相似文献   

5.
Abstract: The significance of root nitrate reductase for sulfur assimilation was studied in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants. For this purpose, uptake, assimilation, and long-distance transport of sulfur were compared between wild-type tobacco and transformants lacking root nitrate reductase, cultivated either with nitrate or with ammonium nitrate. A recently developed empirical model of plant internal nitrogen cycling was adapted to sulfur and applied to characterise whole plant sulfur relations in wild-type tobacco and the transformant. Both transformation and nitrogen nutrition strongly affected sulfur pools and sulfur fluxes. Transformation decreased the rate of sulfate uptake in nitrate-grown plants and root sulfate and total sulfur contents in root biomass, irrespective of N nutrition. Nevertheless, glutathione levels were enhanced in the roots of transformed plants. This may be a consequence of enhanced APR activity in the leaves that also resulted in enhanced organic sulfur content in the leaves of the tranformants. The lack of nitrate reductase in the roots in the transformants caused regulatory changes in sulfur metabolism that resembled those observed under nitrogen deficiency. Nitrate nutrition reduced total sulfur content and all the major fractions analysed in the leaves, but not in the roots, compared to ammonium nitrate supply. The enhanced organic sulfur and glutathione levels in ammonium nitrate-fed plants corresponded well to elevated APR activity. But foliar sulfate contents also increased due to decreased re-allocation of sulfate into the phloem of ammonium nitrate-fed plants. Further studies will elucidate whether this decrease is achieved by downregulation of a specific sulfate transporter in vascular tissues.  相似文献   

6.
Nitrite reductase (ferredoxin:nitrite oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.1) carries out the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonium ions in the chloroplasts/plastids of higher plants. The complete or partial nucleotide sequences of a number of nitrite reductase apoprotein genes or cDNAs have been determined. Deduced amino acid sequence comparisons have identified conserved regions, one of which probably is involved in binding the sirohaem/4Fe4S centre and another in binding the electron donor, reduced ferredoxin. The nitrite reductase apoprotein is encoded by the nuclear DNA and is synthesised as a precursor carrying an N-terminal extension, the transit peptide, which acts to target the protein to, and within, the chloroplast/plastid. In those plants examined the number of nitrite reductase apoprotein genes per haploid genome ranges from one (barley, spinach) to four ( Nicotiana tabacum ). Mutants defective in the nitrite reductase apoprotein gene have been isolated in barley. During plastidogenesis in etiolated plants, synthesis of nitrite reductase is regulated by nitrate, light (phytochrome), and an uncharacterised 'plastidic factor' produced by functional chloroplasts. In leaves of green, white-light-grown plants up-regulation of nitrite reductase synthesis is achieved via nitrate and light and down-regulation by a nitrogenous end-product of nitrate assimilation, perhaps glutamine. A role for phytochrome has not been demonstrated in green, light-grown plants. Light regulation of nitrite reductase genes is related more closely to that of photosynthetic genes than to the nitrate reductase gene. In roots of green, white-light-grown plants nitrate alone is able to bring about synthesis of nitrite reductase, suggesting that the root may possess a mechanism that compensates for the light requirement seen in the leaf.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Seedlings of red maple, white pine, pitch pine and red pine were fertilized with nutrient solutions containing 4 levels of nitrate or ammonium additions. These levels corresponded to approximately 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 times normal availability of nitrogen in northeastern forests. Nitrate reductase (NR) activity was assayed in roots and leaves. Red maples treated with nitrate showed much higher leaf activities and higher ratios of leaf NR activity to root NR activity than any other species. Ammonium additions to red maple and white pine appeared to inhibit NR activity in leaves. With high nitrate additions, NR activity was induced in roots and leaves of pine species, but activity in roots remained much higher than in leaves.  相似文献   

8.
Complementary DNA has been isolated that codes for maize nitrite reductase (NiR) by using the corresponding spinach gene (E Back et al. 1988 Mol Gen Genet 212:20-26) as a heterologous probe. The sequences of the complementary DNAs from the two species are 66% homologous while the deduced amino acid sequences are 86% similar when analogous amino acids are included. A high percentage of the differences in the DNA sequences is due to the extremely strong bias in the corn gene to have a G/C base in the third codon position with 559/569 codons ending in a G or C. Using a hydroponic system, maize seedlings grown in the absence of an exogenous nitrogen source were induced with nitrate or nitrite. Nitrate stimulated a rapid induction of the NiR mRNA in both roots and leaves. There is also a considerable induction of this gene in roots upon the addition of nitrite, although under the conditions used the final mRNA level was not as high as when nitrate was the inducer. There is a small but detectable level of NiR mRNA in leaves prior to induction, but no constitutive NiR mRNA can be seen in the roots. Analysis of genomic DNA supports the notion that there are at least two NiR genes in maize.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Woody plants growing in cerrado and forest communities of south-east Brasil were found to have low levels of nitrate reductase activity in their leaves suggesting that nitrate ions are not an important nitrogen source in these communities. Only in the leaves of species growing in areas of disturbance, such as gaps and forest margins, were high levels of nitrate reductase present. When pot-grown plants were supplied with nitrate, leaves and roots of almost all species responded by inducing increased levels of nitrate reductase. Pioneer or colonizing species exhibited highest levels of nitrate reductase and high shoot: root nitrate reductase activities. Glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase and glutamate dehydrogenase were present in leaves and roots of the species examined.15N-labelled nitrate and ammonium were used to compare the assimilatory characteristics of two species:Enterolobium contortisiliquum, with a high capacity to reduce nitrate, andCalophyllum brasiliense, of low capacity. The rate of nitrate assimilation in the former was five times that of the latter. Both species had similar rates of ammonium assimilation. Results for eight species of contrasting habitats showed that leaf nitrogen content increased in parallel with xylem sap nitrogen concentrations, suggesting that the ability of the root system to acquire, assimilate or export nitrate determines shoot nitrogen status. These results emphasise the importance of nitrogen transport and metabolism in roots as determinants of whole plant nitrogen status.  相似文献   

10.
Under conditions of controlled pH, nitrate and ammonium are equally effective in supporting the growth of young soybean (Glycine max var. Bansei) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus L. var., Mammoth Russian) plans. Soybean contains an active nitrate reductase in roots and leaves, but the low specific activity of this enzyme in sunflower leaves indicates a dependency upon the roots for nitrate reduction. Suppression of nitrate reductase activity in sunflower leaves may be due to high concentrations of ammonia received from the roots. Nitrate reductase activity in leaves of nitrate-supplied soybean and sunflower follows closely the distribution of nitrate reductase. For the roots of both species, glutamic acid dehydrogenase activity was greater with ammonium than with nitrate. The glutamic acid dehydrogenase of ammonium roots is wholly NADH-dependent, whereas that of nitrate roots is active with NADH and NADPH. In leaves, an NADPH-dependent glutamic acid dehydrogenase appears to be responsible for the assimilation of translocated ammonia and ammonia formed by nitrate reduction.  相似文献   

11.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Steptoe) and a nitrate reductasedeficient mutant (narla) were grown in a nutrient film systemwith three concentrations of nitrate. Comparisons were madewith respect to growth, yield, activities of enzymes of nitrateassimilation and accumulation of nitrate and total nitrogen.In nutrient film, grain yeild of the wild-type was greater thanthat of narla. for any treatment. Nitrate reductase activitiesof narla, measured in vivo, were higher than might be expectedin an NR-deficient mutant both in leaves and especially in roots.In all treatments, narla accumulated more nitrate than did thewild-type. No significant genotypic differences were observedin nitrite reductase or glutamine synthetase activities. Whenthe two genotypes were grown in soil (i.e. when availabilityof nitrate to the roots was less than in nutrient film) differencesin growth were insignificant. Hordeum vulgare L., mutant, nitrate status, assimilation and accumulation, growth, yield  相似文献   

12.
The coordinate appearance of the bispecific NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.2) and nitrite reductase (NiR; EC 1.7.7.1) was investigated in leaves and roots from European white birch seedlings (Betula pendula Roth). Induction by nitrate and light of both enzymes was analyzed by in vitro assays and by measuring NR- and NiR-encoding mRNA pools with homologous cDNAs as probes. When birch seedlings were grown on a medium containing ammonium as the sole nitrogen source, low constitutive expression of NR and NiR was observed in leaves, whereas only NiR was significantly expressed in roots. Upon transfer of the seedlings to a nitrate-containing medium, mRNA pools and activities of NR and NiR dramatically increased in leaves and roots, with a more rapid induction in leaves. Peak accumulations of mRNA pools preceded the maximum activities of NR and NiR, suggesting that the appearance of both activities can be mainly attributed to an increased expression of NR and NiR genes. Expression of NR was strictly light-dependent in leaves and roots and was repressed by ammonium in roots but not in leaves. In contrast with NR, constitutive expression of NiR was not affected by light, and even a slight induction following the addition of nitrate was found in the dark in roots but not in leaves. No effect of ammonium on NiR expression was detectable in both organs. In leaves as well as in roots, NiR was induced more rapidly than NR, which appears to be a safety measure to prevent nitrite accumulation.  相似文献   

13.
Light dependency of nitrate and nitrite assimilation to reduced-N in leaves remains a controversial issue in the literature. With the objective of resolving this controversy, the light requirement for nitrate and nitrite assimilation was investigated in several plant species. Dark and light assimilation of [15N]nitrate and [15N]nitrite to ammonium and amino-N was determined with leaves of wheat, corn, soybean, sunflower, and tobacco. In dark aerobic conditions, assimilation of [15N]nitrate as a percentage of the light rate was 16 to 34% for wheat, 9 to 16% for tobacco, 26% for corn, 35 to 76% for soybean, and 55 to 63% for sunflower. In dark aerobic conditions, assimilation of [15N]nitrite as a percentage of the light rate was 11% for wheat, 7% for tobacco, 13% for corn, 28 to 36% for soybeans, and 12% for sunflower. It is concluded that variation among plant species in the light requirement for nitrate and nitrite assimilation explains some of the contradictory results in the literature, but additional explanations must be sought to fully resolve the controversy.

In dark anaerobic conditions, the assimilation of [15N]nitrate to ammonium and amino-N in leaves of wheat, corn, and soybean was 43 to 58% of the dark aerobic rate while dark anaerobic assimilation of [15N]nitrite for the same species was 31 to 41% of the dark aerobic rate. In contrast, accumulation of nitrite in leaves of the same species in the dark was 2.5-to 20-fold higher under anaerobic than aerobic conditions. Therefore, dark assimilation of nitrite cannot alone account for the absence of nitrite accumulation in the in vivo nitrate reductase assay under aerobic conditions. Oxygen apparently inhibits nitrate reduction in the dark even in leaves of plant species that exhibit a relatively high dark rate of [15N]nitrite assimilation.

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14.
15.
16.
Summary Thein vivo nitrate reductase activity (NRA) was determined inAlnus glutinosa plants grown nonsymbiotically on ammonium, nitrate, a combination of both, or symbiotically with atmospheric nitrogen as the only nitrogen source. Root NRA was absent when ammonium or atmospheric nitrogen was the nitrogen source. With nitrate in the culture solution the roots showed a high NRA. However, the leaf NRA behaved quite differently: with negligible activities on all nitrogen sources except atmospheric nitrogen. The foliar NRA measured, however, is likely not due to the activity of the plant but of microbial origin. Methods commonly used to facilitate produced nitrite to leak out of the tissue, such as addition of propanol and cutting the plant material, did not increase the nitrite release from the leaves. A turbidity developed when testing the samples for nitrite which was positively correlated with the NRA. Populations of microorganisms in the phyllosphere did not differ between the nutritional treatments. Bacteria, able to grow on a low-nitrogen medium, were present on the leaves. Nitrifiers could not be detected. The bacteria on the leaves appear to produce nitrite when incubated with leaf material. Grassland Species Research Group, Publication no. 106  相似文献   

17.
Light and dark assimilation of nitrate in plants   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3  
Abstract. Heterotrophic assimilation of nitrate in roots and leaves in darkness is closely linked with the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway. The supply of glucose-6-phosphate to roots and chloroplasts in leaves in darkness is essential for assimilation of nitrite into amino acids. When green leaves are exposed to light, the key enzyme, glucoses-phosphate dehydrogenase, is inhibited by reduction with thioredoxin. Hence the dark nitrate assimilatory pathway is inhibited under photoautotrophic conditions and replaced by regulatory reactions functioning in light. On account of direct photo-synthetic reduction of nitrite in chloroplasts and availability of excess NADH for nitrate reduclase, the rate of nitrate assimilation is extremely rapid in light. Under dark anaerobic conditions also nitrate is equally rapidly reduced to nitrite on account of abolition of competition for NADH between nitrate reductase and mitochondrial oxidation.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate nitrogen assimilation and translocation in Zea mays L. colonized by the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus Glomus fasciculatum (Thax. sensu Gerd.), we measured key enzyme activities, 15N incorporation into free amino acids, and 15N translocation from roots to shoots. Glutamine synthetase and nitrate reductase activities were increased in both roots and shoots compared with control plants, and glutamate dehydrogenase activity increased in roots only. In the presence of [15N]ammonium, glutamine amide was the most heavily labeled product. More label was incorporated into amino acids in VAM plants. The kinetics of 15N labeling and effects of methionine sulfoximine on distribution of 15N-labeled products were entirely consistent with the operation of the glutamate synthase cycle. No evidence was found for ammonium assimilation via glutamate dehydrogenase. 15N translocation from roots to shoots through the xylem was higher in VAM plants compared with control plants. These results establish that, in maize, VAM fungi increase ammonium assimilation, glutamine production, and xylem nitrogen translocation. Unlike some ectomycorrhizal fungi, VAM fungi do not appear to alter the pathway of ammonium assimilation in roots of their hosts.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The effects of different culture conditions on nitrate reductase activity and nitrate reductase protein from Monoraphidium braunii have been studied, using two different immunological techniques, rocket immunoelectrophoresis and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, to determine nitrate reductase protein. The nitrogen sources ammonium and glutamine repressed nitrate reductase synthesis, while nitrite, alanine, and glutamate acted as derepressors. There was a four- to eightfold increase of nitrate reductase activity and a twofold increase of nitrate reductase protein under conditions of nitrogen starvation versus growth on nitrate. Nitrate reductase synthesis was repressed in darkness. However, when Monoraphidium was grown under heterotrophic conditions with glucose as the carbon and energy source, the synthesis of nitrate reductase was maintained. With ammonium or darkness, changes in nitrate reductase activity correlated fairly well with changes in nitrate reductase protein, indicating that in both cases loss of activity was due to repression and not to inactivation of the enzyme. Experiments using methionine sulfoximine, to inhibit ammonium assimilation, showed that ammonium per se and not a product of its metabolism was the corepressor of the enzyme. The appearance of nitrate reductase activity after transferring the cells to induction media was prevented by cycloheximide and by 6-methylpurine, although in this latter case the effect was observed only in cells preincubated with the inhibitor for 1 h before the induction period.  相似文献   

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