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1.
The parental genotypes, cv. Aramir and R567 line, as well as the selected DH lines C23, C47/1, C41 and C55, growing in darkness differed significantly in the level of NR activity in crude leaf extracts independently of nitrate concentration in the medium. The highest activity of the enzyme was found in the line C23. When plants grew on the medium with 0.5 mM KNO3, NR activity in that genotype was almost 10-fold higher than in the parents and lines C41, C55 and also 3.5-fold higher than in the line C47/1. An increase of nitrate concentration in the medium to 10 mM caused a significant increase of NR activity in all the genotypes under study. In the line C23 this enzyme activity was only 20% lower than that found previously in the green leaves of that genotype in light. NR from the leaves of C23 and C41 lines was thermally unstable under in vitro conditions. This enzyme in the leaf extracts from the line C23 was characterized by a considerably lower unstability. The lines DH C23 and C41 growing in the dark on the medium with 0.5 mM KNO3 did not differ in nitrate accumulation in leaves, whereas a larger nitrate content was found in the leaves of the line C41 when it grew on the medium with 10 mM KNO3. Independently of nitrate concentration in the medium, leaves of the line C23 were found to have a higher sucrose content than those of the line C41. Excised, etiolated leaves of barley treated with 0.5 and 10 mM KNO3 in dark under conditions favorable to transpiration had a low NR activity. Leaf treatment with a solution containing 10 mM KNO3 + 0.2 M sucrose caused, on the average, a 13-fold increase of NR activity in comparison to leaves treated only with 10 mM KNO3 and about a 6-fold increase of this enzyme in comparison to leaves treated with 0.5 mM KNO3 + 0.2 M sucrose.  相似文献   

2.
Parental genotypes (cv. Aramir and line R567) and the selected doubled haploid (DH) lines C23, C47/1, C41, C55 did not differ in NR activity when they grew on a nutrient solution containing 10 mM KNO3 and were illuminated with light at 124 μmol·m−2·s−1 intensity. A decrease of nitrate content in the nutrient medium to 0.5 mM at 44 μmol·m−2·s−1 light intensity caused a significant reduction of NR activity in the parental genotypes as well as in the lines C41 and C55. An increase in light intensity to 124 μmol·m−2·s−1 raised NR activity in the leaf extracts of these genotypes. However, independently of light intensity, a high level of this enzyme activity was maintained in the line C23 growing on the nutrient medium with 10 mM and 0.5 mM KNO3. The NR activity in that line dropped only when nitrate content in the medium decreased to 0.1 mM. NR in the leaves of the line C23, as compared to C41, was characterized by a higher thermal stability in all experimental combinations. An increase in light intensity had no significant influence on NR thermal stability in the leaves of the line C41, but induced a significant increase of this enzyme stability in the line C23. The lines C23 and C41 growing on the nutrient medium with 0.5 mM KNO3 differed appreciably by nitrate concentration in leaves. A higher accumulation of nitrates was detected in the leaves of the line C41.  相似文献   

3.
An in situ method for measuring nitrate reductase (NR) activity in Dunaliella viridis was optimized in terms of incubation time, concentration of KNO3, permeabilisers (1-propanol and toluene), pH, salinity, and reducing power (glucose and NADH). NR activity was measured by following nitrite production and was best assayed with 50 mM KNO3, 1.2 mM NADH, 5% 1-propanol (v/v), at pH 8.5. The estimated half-saturation constant (Ks) for KNO3 was 5 mM. Glucose had no effect as external reducing power source, and NADH concentrations >1.2 mM inhibited NR activity. Nitrite production was linear up to 20 min; longer incubation did not lead to higher nitrate reduction. The use of the optimized assay predicted the rate of NO 3 removal from the external medium by D. viridis with high degree of precision. This revised version was published online in September 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
5.
We have investigated the response of two peanut cultivars (TEGUA and UTRE) with different growth habits and branching pattern structures to different nitrogen (N) sources, namely, N-fertilizer or N2 made available by symbiotic fixation, and analysed the pattern of nitrate reductase (NR) activity in these cultivars. Nitrate and amino acid contents were also examined under these growth conditions. In terms of nitrogen source, cv. TEGUA showed a better response to inoculation with Bradyrhizobium sp. SEMIA 6144 at 40 days after planting, while cv. UTRE responded better to N-fertilizer (5 mM KNO3). Both cultivars showed different patterns of NR activity in the analyzed plant organs (leaves, roots, and nodules), which were dependent on the N source. When nitrogen became available to the plant through symbiotic N2 fixation, the patterns of NR activity distribution were different in the two cultivars, with cv. TEGUA showing a higher NR activity in the nodules than in the leaves and roots, and cv. UTRE showing no difference in terms of NR activity among organs. The nitrate and amino acid contents showed a similar trend between the two cultivars, with the highest nitrate content in the leaves of fertilized plants and the highest amino acid content in the nodules. The high nitrate content of the leaves of cv. UTRE indicated the better response of this cultivar to N-fertilizer.  相似文献   

6.
The cotyledons of soybean begin to develop photosynthetic capacity shortly after emergence. The cotyledons develop nitrate reductase (NR) activity in parallel with an increase in chlorophyll and a decrease in protein. In crude extracts of 5- to 8-day-old cotyledons, NR activity is greatest with NADH as electron donor. In extracts of older cotyledons, NR activity is greatest with NADPH. Blue-Sepharose was used to purify and separate the NR activities into two fractions. When the blue-Sepharose was eluted with NADPH, NR activity was obtained which was most active with NADPH as electron donor. Assays of the NADPH-eluted NR with different concentrations of nitrate revealed that the highest activity was obtained in 80 millimolar KNO3. Thus, this fraction has properties similar to the low nitrate affinity NAD(P)H:NR of soybean leaves. When 5- to 8-day-old cotyledons were extracted and purified, further elution of the blue-Sepharose with KNO3, subsequent to the NADPH elution, yielded an NR fraction most active with NADH. Assays of this fraction with different nitrate concentrations revealed that this NR had a higher nitrate affinity and was similar to the NADH:NR of soybean leaves. The KNO3-eluted NR fraction which was purified from the extracts of 9- to 14-day-old cotyledons, was most active with NADPH. The analysis of these fractions prepared from the extracts of older cotyledons indicated that residual NAD(P)H:NR contaminated the NADH:NR. Despite this complication, the pattern of development of the purified NR fractions was consistent with the changes observed in the crude extract NR activities. It was concluded that NADH:NR was most active in young cotyledons and that as the cotyledons aged the NAD(P)H:NR became more active.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Wheat seedlings (Triticum vulgare) treated with 1 mm KNO3 or NaNO3, in the presence of 0.2 mm CaSO4, were compared during a 48-hour period with respect to nitrate uptake, translocation, accumulation and reduction; cation uptake and accumulation; and malate accumulation. Seedlings treated with KNO3 absorbed and accumulated more nitrate, had higher nitrate reductase levels in leaves but less in roots, accumulated 17 times more malate in leaves, and accumulated more of the accompanying cation than seedlings treated with NaNO3. Within seedlings of each treatment, changes in nitrate reductase activity and malate accumulation were parallel in leaves and in roots. Despite the great difference in malate accumulation, leaves of the KNO3-treated seedlings had only slightly greater levels of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase than leaves of NaNO3-treated seedlings. NADP-malic enzyme levels increased only slightly in leaves and roots of both KNO3- and NaNO3-treated seedlings. The effects of K+ and Na+ on all of these parameters can best be explained by their effects on nitrate translocation, which in turn affects the other parameters. In a separate experiment, we confirmed that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity increased about 2-fold during 36 hours of KNO3 treatment, and increased only slightly in the KCl control.  相似文献   

9.
We recently obtained evidence that the activity of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf nitrate reductase (NR) responds rapidly and reversibly to light/dark transitions by a mechanism that is strongly correlated with protein phosphorylation. Phosphorylation of the NR protein appears to increase sensitivity to Mg2+ inhibition, without affecting activity in the absence of Mg2+. In the present study, we have compared the light/dark modulation of sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS), also known to be regulated by protein phosphorylation, and NR activities (assayed with and without Mg2+) in spinach leaves. There appears to be a physiological role for both enzymes in mature source leaves (production of sucrose and amino acids for export), whereas NR is also present and activated by light in immature sink leaves. In mature leaves, there are significant diurnal changes in SPS and NR activities (assayed under selective conditions where phosphorylation status affects enzyme activity) during a normal day/night cycle. With both enzymes, activities are highest in the morning and decline as the photoperiod progresses. For SPS, diurnal changes are largely the result of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, whereas with NR, the covalent modification is super-imposed on changes in the level of NR protein. Accumulation of end products of photosynthesis in excised illuminated leaves increased maximum NR activity, reduced its sensitivity of Mg2+ inhibition, and prevented the decline in activity with time in the light seen with attached leaves. In contrast, SPS was rapidly inactivated in excised leaves. Overall, NR and SPS share many common features of control but are not identical in terms of regulation in situ.  相似文献   

10.
The relation between nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) activity, activation state and NR protein in leaves of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings was investigated. Maximum NR activity (NRAmax) and NR protein content (Western blotting) were modified by growing plants hydroponically at low (0.3 mM) or high (10 mM) nitrate supply. In addition, plants were kept under short-day (8 h light/16 h dark) or long-day (16 h light/8 h dark) conditions in order to manipulate the concentration of nitrate stored in the leaves during the dark phase, and the concentrations of sugars and amino acids accumulated during the light phase, which are potential signalling compounds. Plants were also grown under phosphate deficiency in order to modify their glucose-6-phosphate content. In high-nitrate/long-day conditions, NRAmax and NR protein were almost constant during the whole light period. Low-nitrate/long-day plants had only about 30% of the NRAmax and NR protein of high-nitrate plants. In low-nitrate/long-day plants, NRAmax and NR protein decreased strongly during the second half of the light phase. The decrease was preceded by a strong decrease in the leaf nitrate content. Short daylength generally led to higher nitrate concentrations in leaves. Under short-day/low-nitrate conditions, NRAmax was slightly higher than under long-day conditions and remained almost constant during the day. This correlated with maintenance of higher nitrate concentrations during the short light period. The NR activation state in the light was very similar in high-nitrate and low-nitrate plants, but dark inactivation was twice as high in the high-nitrate plants. Thus, the low NRAmax in low-nitrate/long-day plants was slightly compensated by a higher activation state of NR. Such a partial compensation of a low NRmax by a higher dark activation state was not observed with phosphate-depleted plants. Total leaf concentrations of sugars, of glutamine and glutamate and of glucose-6-phosphate did not correlate with the NR activation state nor with NRAmax. Received: 24 March 1999 / Accepted: 31 May 1999  相似文献   

11.
12.
The effect of some ammonium salts on nitrate reductase (NR) level, onin vivo nitrate reduction and on nitrate content was followed in the presence of nitrate in the medium, under changing experimental conditions, in excisedPisum sativum roots, and their effect was compared with that of KNO3, Ca(NO3)2 and NaNO3 at 15 mM NO3 - concentration, i.e. at a concentration which considerably exceeded the level of saturation with nitrate with respect to nitrate reductase. The effect of ammonium salts on NR level is indirect and changes from a positive one to a strongly negative one which is dependent on the time of action of the salt, on the presence of other cations, on pH of the solution of the ammonium salt and on the nature of the anion of the ammonium salt. A positive effect on the enzyme level can be observed in the presence of other cations than NH4 + at suitable concentrations of those ammonium salts, the solutions of which have their pH values in the acid region (i.e. NH4H2PO4, (NH4)2SO4 and NH4NO3). However their positive effect is independent of the presence of NH4 + ions, and it is obviously the result of an increased concentration of H+ ions. A clear-cut negative effect on NR level can be observed after 24 h in one-salt NH4NO3 solution where NH4 + is not balanced with other cations and thus certainly can adversely influence many metabolic processes, and in the solutions containing neutral (pH 6.2) and dibasic ammonium phosphates in which dissolved undissociated ammonia [(NH3). (H2O) which can also affect many metabolic processes incl. proteosynthesis] probably has a toxic influence. Thein vivo nitrate reduction is always depressed in excised pea roots in the presence of ammonium salts in the medium, regardless of the level of nitrate reductase. Under the described conditions, no relationship could be established between the enzyme level and the so-called metabolic NO3 - pool (i.e. NO2 - production under anaerobic conditions), nor between NR level and the total nitrate content in the roots. One-salt solutions of NaNO3, Ca(NO3)2 and KNO3 exert different effects on the level of nitrate reductase and on the content of NO3 - in the roots, but the in vivo NO3 - reduction shows the same trend as NR level in the roots influenced by these salts. Cl- ions, supplied in NH4C1, depress both NR level and NO3 - content in the roots at higher concentrations, but they do not significantly affect the in vivo nitrate reduction in comparison with other ammonium salts. These results indicate that NR level,in vivo nitrate reduction, and nitrate uptake can be regulated in pea roots independently of each other.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The differential regulation of the two nitrate reductase (NR, EC 1.6.6.1) genes of Arabidopsis thaliana L. Heynh was examined. cDNAs corresponding to each of the NR genes (NR1 and NR2) were used to measure changes in the steady-state levels of NR mRNA in response to nitrate, light, circadian rhythm, and tissue specificity. Although nitrate-induction kinetics of the two genes are very similar, NR1 is expressed in the absence of nitrate at a higher basal level than NR2. Nitrate induction is transient both in the roots and leaves, however the kinetics are different: the induction and decline in the roots precede that in the leaves. Light induces the expression of each of the genes with significantly different kinetics: NR2 reached saturation more rapidly than did NR1. Both genes showed similar diurnal patterns of circadian rhythm, with NR2 mRNA accumulating earlier in the morning.  相似文献   

15.
Control of nitrate reductase by circadian and diurnal rhythms in tomato   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tucker DE  Allen DJ  Ort DR 《Planta》2004,219(2):277-285
  相似文献   

16.
17.
We studied the salt stress (100 mM NaCl) effects on the diurnal changes in N metabolism enzymes in tomato seedlings (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Chibli F1) that were grown under high nitrogen (HN, 5 mM NO(3)(-)) or low nitrogen (LN, 0.1 mM NO(3)(-)). NaCl stress led to a decrease in plant DW production and leaf surface to higher extent in HN than in LN plants. Total leaf chlorophyll (Chl) content was decreased by salinity in HN plants, but unchanged in LN plants. Soluble protein content was decreased by salt in the leaves from HN and LN plants, but increased in the stems-petioles from LN plants. Nitrate reductase (NR, EC 1.6.1.6) showed an activity peak during first part of the light period, but no diurnal changes were observed for the nitrite reductase (NiR, EC 1.7.7.1) activity. Glutamine synthetase (GS, EC 6.3.1.2) and glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT, EC 1.4.7.1) activities increased in HN plant leaves during the second part of the light period, probably when enough ammonium is produced by nitrate reduction. NR and NiR activities in the leaves were more decreased by NaCl in LN than in HN plants, whereas the opposite response was obtained for the GS activity. Fd-GOGAT activity was inhibited by NaCl in HN plant leaves, while salinity did not shift the peak of the NR and Fd-GOGAT activities during a diurnal cycle. The induction by NaCl stress occurred for the NR and GS activities in the roots of both HN and LN plants. Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH, EC 1.4.1.2) activity shifted from the deaminating activity to the aminating activity in all tissues of HN plants. In LN plants, both aminating and deaminating activities were increased by salinity in the leaves and roots. The differences in the sensitivity to NaCl between HN and LN plants are discussed in relation to the N metabolism status brought on by salt stress.  相似文献   

18.
The activity of nitrate reductase (+Mg(2+), NR(act)) in illuminated leaves from spinach, barley and pea was 50-80% of the maximum activity (+EDTA, NR(max)). However, NR from leaves of Ricinus communis L. had a 10-fold lower NR(act), while NR(max) was similar to that in spinach leaves. The low NR(act) of Ricinus was independent of day-time and nitrate nutrition, and varied only slightly with leaf age. Possible factors in Ricinus extracts inhibiting NR were not found. NR(act) from Ricinus, unlike the spinach enzyme, was very low at pH 7.6, but much higher at more acidic pH with a distinct maximum at pH 6.5. NR(max) had a broad pH response profile that was similar for the spinach and the Ricinus enzyme. Accordingly, the Mg(2+)-sensitivity of NR from Ricinus was strongly pH-dependent (increasing sensitivity with increasing pH), and as a result, the apparent activation state of NR from a Ricinus extract varied dramatically with pH and Mg(2+)concentration. Following a light-dark transition, NR(act) from Ricinus decreased within 1 h by 40%, but this decrease was paralleled by NR(max). In contrast to the spinach enzyme, Ricinus-NR was hardly inactivated by incubating leaf extracts with ATP plus okadaic acid. A competition analysis with antibodies against the potential 14-3-3 binding site around ser 543 of the spinach enzyme revealed that Ricinus-NR contains the same site. Removal of 14-3-3 proteins from Ricinus-NR by anion exchange chromatography, activated spinach-NR but caused little if any activation of Ricinus-NR. It is suggested that Mg(2+)-inhibition of Ricinus-NR does not require 14-3-3 proteins. The rather slow changes in Ricinus-NR activity upon a light/dark transient may be mainly due to NR synthesis or degradation.  相似文献   

19.
G. Gebauer  A. Melzer  H. Rehder 《Oecologia》1984,63(1):136-142
Summary With Rumex obtusifolius L., the influence of some environmental conditions on nitrate uptake and reduction were investigated. Nitrate concentrations of plant material were determined by HPLC, the activity of nitrate reductase by an in vivo test. As optimal incubation medium, a buffer containing 0.04 M KNO3; 0.25 M KH2PO4; 1.5% propanol (v/v); pH 8.0 was found. Vacuum infiltration caused an increase of enzyme activity of up to 40%.High nitrate concentrations were found in roots and leaf petioles. Nitrate reductase activity of these organs, however, was low. On the other hand, the highest nitrate reductase activity was observed in leaf laminae, which contained lowest nitrate concentrations.In leaves, nitrate content and nitrate reductase activity exhibited inverse diurnal fluctuations. During darkness, decreasing activities of the enzyme were followed by increasing nitrate concentrations, while during light the contrary was true. In petioles diurnal fluctuations in nitrate content were observed, too. No significant correlations with illumination, however, could be found.Our results prove that Rumex obtusifolius is characterized by an intensive nitrate turnover. Theoretically, internal nitrate content of the plant would be exhausted within a few hours, if a supply via the roots would be excluded.  相似文献   

20.
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