Induction of a high-capacity nitrate-uptake mechanism in barley roots prompted by nitrate uptake through a constitutive low-capacity mechanism |
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Authors: | Rudolf Behl Rudolf Tischner Klaus Raschke |
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Affiliation: | (1) Pflanzenphysiologisches Insitut der Universität Göttingen, Untere Karspüle 2, D-3400 Göttingen, Federal Republic of Germany;(2) Botanischer Garten der Universität Göttingen, Untere Karspüle 2, D-3400 Göttingen, Federal Republic of Germany;(3) Present address: Lehrstuhl für Botanik I der Universität Würzburg, Mittlerer Dallenbergweg 64, D-8700 Würzburg, Federal Republic of Germany |
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Abstract: | Roots of nitrate-starved and nitrate-pretreated seedlings of Hordeum vulgare were used to investigate the induction of a high-capacity uptake mechanism for nitrate. When exposed to 0.2 mmol·l-1KNO3, nitrate-starved roots took up nitrate at a rate of approx. 1 mol·(g FW)-1·h-1; K+ was absorbed at a rate ten-times higher. Nitrate uptake accelerated after a lag of about 1 h, until it matched the rate of K+ uptake about 4 h later. p-Fluorophenylalanine (FPA), which prevents the synthesis of functioning proteins, suppressed the development of the high-capacity mechanism. Pretreatment of the roots with 0.2 mmol·l-1 Ca(NO3)2 for 24 h established the high-capacity mechanism. Pretreated roots were able to absorb nitrate at high rates immediately upon exposure to 0.2 mmol·l-1KNO3, in the absence or presence of FPA. The high-capacity mechanism, once established, appeared to have a protein turnover as slow as that of the low-capacity mechanism or that of the mechanism involved in the uptake of K+. In contrast, the mechanisms for the transport of nitrate and K+ into the xylem vessels were completely blocked by FPA within 1 h of application, confirming earlier evidence for a rapid turnover of the transport proteins in the xylem parenchyma.Nitrate reduction proceeded at rates which were roughly one-tenth as large as the rates of the respective nitrate-uptake processes, indicating that nitrate-reductase activity was determined by the rate of nitrate uptake and not vice versa.We conclude that the formation of a high-capacity nitrate-uptake mechanism in barley roots occurs in response to nitrate uptake through a constitutive mechanism of low capacity which appears to function as a sensing mechanism for nitrate in the environment of the roots.Abbreviation FPA p-fluorophenylalanine |
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Keywords: | Hordeum (root) Nitrate uptake (mechanisms: constitutive, induced) Root (uptake, accumulation and transport of K+ and nitrate) p-Fluorophenylalanine (nitrate uptake) |
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