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1.
The study aimed to test the hypothesis that ammonia production by Rhizobium bacteroids provides not only a source of nitrogen for growth but has a central regulatory role in maintaining the metabolic activity and functional integrity of the legume nodule. Production of ammonia in intact, attached nodules was interrupted by short-term (up to 3 days) exposure of the nodulated root systems of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp cv Vita 3: Rhizobium CB 756) and lupin (Lupinus albus L. cv Ultra: Rhizobium WU 425) to atmospheres of argon:oxygen (80:20; v/v). Treatment did not affect nodule growth, levels of plant cell and bacteroid protein, leghaemoglobin content, or nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activity (acetylene reduction) but severely reduced (by 90%) synthesis and export of the major nitrogenous solutes produced by the two symbioses (ureides in cowpea, amides in lupin). Glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) and NAD:glutamate oxidoreductase (EC I.4.1.2) were more or less stable to Ar:O2 treatment, but activities of the glutamine-utilizing enzymes, glutamate synthase (EC 2.6.1.53), asparagine synthetase (EC 6.3.5.4) (lupin only), and de novo purine synthesis (cowpea only), were all markedly reduced. Production and export of nitrogenous solutes by both symbioses resumed within 2 hours after transferring Ar:O2-treated plants back to air. In each case the major exported product of fixation after transfer was initially glutamine, reflecting the relative stability of glutamine synthetase activity. Subsequently, glutamine declined and products of its assimilation became predominant consistent with resurgence of enzymes for the synthesis of asparagine in lupin and ureides in cowpea. Enzymes not directly involved with either ammonia or glutamine assimilation (purine synthesis, purine oxidation, and carbon metabolism of both bacteroids and plant cells) also showed transient changes in activity following interruption of N2 supply. These data have been interpreted to indicate a far-reaching effect of the production of ammonia by bacteroids on a wide range of enzymes, possibly through control of protein turnover, rather than a highly specific effect of ammonia, or some product of its assimilation, on a few enzyme species.  相似文献   

2.
The relationship between the relative abundance of ureides ([ureide-N/ureide-N plus nitrate-N] × 100) in the shoot axis (stems plus petioles), nodulated roots and leaflets of “Bragg” soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill) and the symbiotic dependence of these plants was examined under glass-house conditions. Plants, inoculated with effective Rhizobium japonicum CB1809, were grown with their roots exposed continuously to a nutrient solution containing either 0, 1.5, 3.0, 6.0 or 12.0 millimolar NO3-N per liter. Nodulation and N2-acetylene fixation were correlated inversely with the level of nitrate. Seasonal acetylene reduction profiles for each of the nitrate treatments were integrated and the symbiotic dependence ([N2 fixed per total plant N] × 100) determined using a conversion ratio of 1.5:1 (acetylene reduced:N2 fixed), calculated from the zero NO3 treatment. Examination of the nitrogenous solutes of the shoot axis and nodulated roots showed linear relationships between the relative abundance of ureides and the symbiotic dependence of the plants. Two standard curves, depicting these relationships during vegetative and reproductive growth, were drawn for each plant part. The overriding effect of plant age invalidated any attempt to develop a standard relationship for leaflets. Data from two diurnal studies suggested that relative ureides were insensitive to diurnal fluctuations, thus simplifying sampling procedures. Plant material could be stored at ambient temperatures (20-30°C) for up to 24 h without affecting the relative concentration of ureides and nitrate. It is suggested that the shoot axis provides the most suitable target organ when using this technique as a quantitative assay for N2 fixation because of ease of sampling of these tissues, especially with field-grown plants.  相似文献   

3.
The competition between combined nitrogen and nitrogen fixation in legumes was studied after a 24 h exposure of nodulated French-beans to nitrate. Acetylene reduction by bacteroids was significantly inhibited and even nitrogenase extracted from nitrate-treated plant nodules showed reduced activity. Sensitivity to nitrate was directly related to nodule age and also increased with increasing oxygen tensions in the bacteroid incubations with or without a gas phase; it was particularly marked when glucose was used in place of succinate as energy-yielding substrate. Bacteroid respiration was also depressed by nitrate-treatment of the plants, leading to diminished acetylene reduction and this effect increased with increasing oxygen concentrations. Added oxyleghemoglobin partly restored oxygen consumption and acetylene reduction by bacteroid suspensions.  相似文献   

4.
In vivo CO2 fixation and in vitro phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase levels have been measured in lupin (Lupinus angustifolius L.) root nodules of various ages. Both activities were greater in nodule tissue than in either primary or secondary root tissue, and increased about 3-fold with the onset of N2 fixation. PEP carboxylase activity was predominantly located in the bacteroid-containing zone of mature nodules, but purified bacteroids contained no activity. Partially purified PEP carboxylases from nodules, roots, and leaves were identical in a number of kinetic parameters. Both in vivo CO2 fixation activity and in vitro PEP carboxylase activity were significantly correlated with nodule acetylene reduction activity during nodule development. The maximum rate of in vivo CO2 fixation in mature nodules was 7.9 nmol hour−1 mg fresh weight−1, similar to rates of N2 fixation and reported values for amino acid translocation.  相似文献   

5.
It is well established that nitrate is a potent inhibitor of nodulation and nitrogen fixation in legumes. The objective of this study was to demonstrate the relative insensitivity of these processes to nitrate with Calopogonium mucunoides, a tropical South American perennial legume, native to the cerrado (savannah) region. It was found that nodule number was reduced by about half in the presence of high levels of nitrate (15 mM) but nodule growth (total nodule mass per plant) and nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction activity and xylem sap ureide levels) were not affected. Other sources of N (ammonium and urea) were also without effect at these concentrations. At even higher concentrations (30 mM), nitrate did promote significant inhibition (ca. 50%) of acetylene reduction activity, but no significant reduction in xylem sap ureides was found. The extraordinary insensitivity of nodulation and N2 fixation of C. mucunoides to nitrate suggests that this species should be useful in studies aimed at elucidating the mechanisms of nitrate inhibition of these processes.  相似文献   

6.
Effective (N2-fixing) alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and plant-controlled ineffective (non-N2-fixing) alfalfa recessive for the in1 gene were compared to determine the effects of the in1 gene on nodule development, acetylene reduction activity (ARA), and nodule enzymes associated with N assimilation and disease resistance. Effective nodule ARA reached a maximum before activities of glutamine synthetase (GS), glutamate synthase (GOGAT), aspartate aminotransferase (AAT), asparagine synthetase (AS), and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) peaked. Ineffective nodule ARA was only 5% of effective nodule ARA. Developmental profiles of GS, GOGAT, AAT, and PEPC activities were similar for effective and ineffective nodules, but activities in ineffective nodules were lower and declined earlier. Little AS activity was detected in developing ineffective nodules. Changes in GS, GOGAT, AAT, and PEPC activities in developing and senescent effective and ineffective nodules generally paralleled amounts of immunologically detectable enzyme polypeptides. Effective nodule GS, GOGAT, AAT, AS, and PEPC activities declined after defoliation. Activities of glutamate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, phenylalanine ammonia lyase, and caffeic acid-o-methyltransferase were unrelated to nodule effectiveness. Maximum expression of nodule N-assimilating enzymes appeared to require the continued presence of a product associated with effective bacteroids that was lacking in in1 effective nodules.  相似文献   

7.
Wu S  Harper JE 《Plant physiology》1990,92(4):1142-1147
It was previously reported that three soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) nodulation mutants (NOD1-3, NOD2-4, and NOD3-7) were partially tolerant to nitrate when nitrate was supplied simultaneously with inoculation at the time of transplanting. The current study evaluated the effect of short-term nitrate treatment on nitrogenase activity (C2H2 reduction per plant and per nodule weight) and on relative abundance of ureides when nitrate application was delayed until plants were 3 weeks old and nodules were fully developed. Nitrogenase activity of the mutants was similar to that of Williams after an initial 3-week growth period, prior to nitrate treatment. Application of 5 millimolar nitrate resulted in greater inhibition of nitrogenase activity in Williams than in the three mutants. NOD1-3 was most tolerant of nitrate among the mutants tested and showed the highest relative abundance of ureides. Although C2H2 reduction activity per plant for NOD1-3 was higher than for Williams in the presence of nitrate, C2H2 reduction activity per gram of nodules was lower for NOD1-3 than for Williams in the presence and absence of nitrate. Compared to Williams, NOD1-3 had higher nodule ureide concentration and had similar glutamine synthetase activity in nodule tissue, indicating its nodules have normal nitrogen assimilation pathways. Nitrate application resulted in ureide accumulation in nodule tissue as well as in all plant parts assayed. Unexpectedly, nitrate treatment also increased the rate of ureide degradative capacity of leaves in both NOD1-3 and Williams. The data confirmed that nitrogenase activity of the selected nodulation mutants was more, but still only partially, tolerant of nitrate compared with the Williams parent.  相似文献   

8.
Soybean (Glycine max L. cv Williams) seeds were sown in pots containing a 1:1 perlite-vermiculite mixture and grown under greenhouse conditions. Nodules were initiated with a nitrate reductase expressing strain of Rhizobium japonicum, USDA 110, or with nitrate reductase nonexpressing mutants (NR 108, NR 303) derived from USDA 110. Nodules initiated with either type of strain were normal in appearance and demonstrated nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction). The in vivo nitrate reductase activity of N2-grown nodules initiated with nitrate reductase-negative mutant strains was less than 10% of the activity shown by nodules initiated with the wild-type strain. Regardless of the bacterial strain used for inoculation, the nodule cytosol and the cell-free extracts of the leaves contained both nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase activities. The wild-type bacteroids contained nitrate reductase but not nitrite reductase activity while the bacteroids of strains NR 108 and NR 303 contained neither nitrate reductase nor nitrite reductase activities.

Addition of 20 millimolar KNO3 to bacteroids of the wild-type strain caused a decrease in nitrogenase activity by more than 50%, but the nitrate reductase-negative strains were insensitive to nitrate. The nitrogenase activity of detached nodules initiated with the nitrate reductase-negative mutant strains was less affected by the KNO3 treatment as compared to the wild-type strain; however, the results were less conclusive than those obtained with the isolated bacteroids.

The addition of either KNO3 or KNO2 to detached nodules (wild type) suspended in a semisolid agar nutrient medium caused an inhibition of nitrogenase activity of 50% and 65% as compared to the minus N controls, and provided direct evidence for a localized effect of nitrate and nitrite at the nodule level. Addition of 0.1 millimolar sucrose stimulated nitrogenase activity in the presence or absence of nitrate or nitrite. The sucrose treatment also helped to decrease the level of nitrite accumulated within the nodules.

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9.
Efficiency of symbiotic nitrogen fixation in legumes depends on bringing together the processes of N2 fixation, assimilation of its products, supply of nitrogenase with energy, and development of nodule tissue and cellular structures. Coordination of these processes could arise from the evolutionary old functions of the nodules associated with deposition of the products of photosynthesis governed by systemic signals traveling between the above-ground organs and the roots. Further increase in symbiotic efficiency was associated with a pronounced ability to fix N2 by intracellular bacteroids that lost capability to propagate (as observed in galegoid legumes from the tribes Viciae, Trifolieae, and Galegae producing indeterminate nodules). However, efficiency of these symbioses is restricted by a slow removal from the nodules of the products of N2 fixation, which are assimilated along the same amide pathway as nitrogen compounds arriving from the soil. In legumes from the tribe Phaseoleae, such a restriction was overcome owing to a particular way of nitrogen assimilation via its incorporation into ureides (in determinate nodules). Development of symbioses where specialization of bacteroids in symbiotic fixation of atmospheric nitrogen is combined with its ureide assimilation will make it possible to produce new forms of plants highly efficient in symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

10.
Partially purified, cell-free extracts from nodules of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp. cv. Caloona) and soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. cv. Bragg) showed high rates of de novo purine nucleotide and purine base synthesis. Activity increased with rates of nitrogen fixation and ureide export during development of cowpea plants; maximum rates (equivalent to 1.2 micromoles N2 per hour per gram fresh nodule) being similar to those of maximum nitrogen fixation (1-2 micromoles N2 per hour per gram fresh nodule). Extracts from actively fixing nodules of a symbiosis not producing ureides, Lupinus albus L. cv. Ultra, showed rates of de novo purine synthesis 0.1% to 0.5% those of cowpea and soybean. Most (70-90%) of the activity was associated with the particulate components of the nodule, but up to 50% was released from this fraction by osmotic shock. The accumulated end products with particulate fractions were inosine monophosphate and aminoimidazole carboxamide ribonucleotide. Further metabolism to purine bases and ureides was restricted to the soluble fraction of the nodule extract. High rates of inosine monophosphate synthesis were supported by glutamine as amide donor, lower rates (10-20%) by ammonia, and negligible rates with asparagine as substrate.  相似文献   

11.
Transport of nitrogen in the xylem of soybean plants   总被引:54,自引:37,他引:17       下载免费PDF全文
Experiments were conducted to characterize the distribution of N compounds in the xylem sap of nodulated and nonnodulated soybean plants through development and to determine the effects of exogenous N on the distribution of N compounds in the xylem. Xylem sap was collected from nodulated and nonnodulated greenhouse-grown soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr. “Ransom”) from the vegetative phase to the pod-filling phase. The sum of the nitrogen in the amino acid, nitrate, ureide (allantoic acid and allantoin), and ammonium fractions of the sap from both types of plants agreed closely with total N as assayed by a Kjeldahl technique. Sap from nodulated plants supplied with N-free nutrient solution contained seasonal averages of 78 and 20% of the total N as ureide-N and amino acid-N, respectively. Sap from nonnodulated plants supplied with a 20 millimolar KNO3 nutrient solution contained seasonal averages of 6, 36, and 58% of total N as ureide-N, amino acid-N, and nitrate-N, respectively. Allantoic acid was the predominant ureide in the xylem sap and asparagine was the predominant amino acid. When well nodulated plants were supplied with 20 millimolar KNO3, beginning at 65 days, C2H2 reduction (N2 fixation) decreased relative to nontreated plants and there was a concomitant decrease in the ureide content of the sap. A positive correlation (r = 0.89) was found between the ureide levels in xylem sap and nodule dry weights when either exogenous nitrate-N or urea-N was supplied at 10 and 20 millimolar concentrations to inoculated plants. The results demonstrate that ureides play a dominant role in N transport in nodulated soybeans and that the synthesis of ureides is largely dependent upon nodulation and N2 fixation.  相似文献   

12.
The synthesis and accumulation of nitrite has been suggested as a causative factor in the inhibition of legume nodules supplied with nitrate. Plants were grown in sand culture with a moderate level of nitrate (2.1 to 6.4 millimolar) supplied continuously from seed germination to 30 to 50 days after planting. In a comparison of nitrate treatments, a highly significant negative correlation between nitrite concentration in soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) nodules and nodule fresh weight per shoot dry weight was found even when bacteroids lacked nitrate reductase (NR). However, in a comparison of two Rhizobium japonicum strains, there was only 12% as much nitrite in nodules formed by NRR. japonicum as in nodules formed by NR+R. japonicum, and growth and acetylene reduction activity of both types of nodules was about equally inhibited. In a comparison of eight other NR+ and NRR. japonicum strains, and a comparison of G. max, Phaseolus vulgaris, and Pisum sativum, the concentration of nitrite in nodules was unrelated to nodule weight per plant or to specific acetylene reduction activity. The very small concentration of nitrite found in P. vulgaris nodules (0.05 micrograms NO2-N per gram fresh weight) was probably below that required for the inhibition of nitrogenase based on published in vitro experiments, and yet the specific acetylene reduction activity was inhibited 83% by nitrate. The overall results do not support the idea that nitrite plays a role in the inhibition of nodule growth and nitrogenase activity by nitrate.  相似文献   

13.
F. Houwaard 《Plant and Soil》1980,54(2):271-282
Summary Addition of ammonium chloride or potassium nitrate to nodulated pea plants resulted in a decrease in acetylene-reducing activity. Both nodule growth and specific activity of the nodules were diminished. Acetylene-reducing activity of isolated bacteroids, treated with EDTA-toluene and supplied with ATP and dithionite, had not decreased after a 3-day treatment of the plants with NH4Cl or KNO3. The effect of combined nitrogen could be counteracted by raising the light intensity or by the addition of sucrose to the growth medium. The latter treatment reduced the nitrogen uptake by the plants. It is concluded that combined nitrogen affects symbiotic nitrogen fixation via the carbohydrate supply to the bacteroids.  相似文献   

14.
Xylem sap composition was examined in nodulated and nonnodulated cowpea (Vigna unguiculata [L.] Walp.) plants receiving a range of levels of NO3 and in eight other ureide-forming legumes utilizing NO3 or N2 as sole source of nitrogen. A 15N dilution technique determined the proportions of plant nitrogen derived from N2 in the nodulated cowpeas fed NO3. Xylem sap composition of NO3-fed, nodulated cowpea varied predictably with the relative extents to which N2 and NO3 were being utilized. The ratios of asparagine to glutamine (N/N) and of NO3 to ureide (N/N) in xylem sap increased with increasing dependence on NO3 whereas per cent of xylem nitrogen as ureide and the ratio of ureide plus glutamine to asparagine plus NO3 (N/N) in xylem sap increased with increasing dependence on N2 fixation. The amounts of NO3 and ureides stored in leaflets, stems plus petioles, and roots of cowpea varied in a complex manner with level of NO3 and the presence or absence of N2 fixation. All species showed higher proportions of organic nitrogen as ureide and several-fold lower ratios of asparagine to glutamine in their xylem sap when relying on N2 than when utilizing NO3. In nodulated (minus nitrate) cowpea and mung bean (Vigna radiata [L.] Wilczek) the percentage of xylem nitrogen as ureide remained constant during growth but the ratio of asparagine to glutamine varied considerably. The biochemical significance of the above differences in xylem sap composition was discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The sensitivity of N2 fixation to drought stress in soybean (Glycine max Merr.) has been shown to be associated with high ureide accumulation in the shoots, which has led to the hypothesis that N2 fixation during drought is decreased by a feedback mechanism. The ureide feedback hypothesis was tested directly by measuring the effect of 10 mm ureide applied by stem infusion or in the nutrient solution of hydroponically grown plants on acetylene reduction activity (ARA). An almost complete inhibition of ARA was observed within 4 to 7 d after treatment, accompanied by an increase in ureide concentration in the shoot but not in the nodules. The inhibition of ARA resulting from ureide treatments was dependent on the concentration of applied ureide. Urea also inhibited ARA but asparagine resulted in the greatest inhibition of nodule activity. Because ureides did not accumulate in the nodule upon ureide treatment, it was concluded that they were not directly inhibitory to the nodules but that their influence mediated through a derivative compound, with asparagine being a potential candidate. Ureide treatment resulted in a continual decrease in nodule permeability to O2 simultaneous with the inhibition of nitrogenase activity during a 5-d treatment period, although it was not clear whether the latter phenomenon was a consequence or a cause of the decrease in the nodule permeability to O2.The physiological basis of N2 fixation inhibition by water deficits in legume nodules is not clearly understood. A potential physiological basis for this water-deficit sensitivity may be that drought stress decreases the Po (Weisz et al., 1985), as has been shown with other stresses such as temperature, salinity, or nitrate (Hunt and Layzell, 1993; Serraj et al., 1994; Denison and Harter, 1995). The role of O2 limitation in the response of nitrogenase activity to drought stress has been discussed extensively (Diaz del Castillo and Layzell, 1995; Purcell and Sinclair, 1995; Serraj and Sinclair, 1996b; Serraj et al., 1999). However, the mechanisms by which drought affects Po have not been elucidated. It is not clear whether drought stress has a direct effect on Po, or whether the decrease in Po is a consequence of a decrease in nodule activity.An alternative explanation for the decrease in nitrogenase activity under drought could be a feedback mechanism involving the accumulation of N compounds. Pate et al. (1969) proposed that lower rates of water movement out of the nodule during drought stress may restrict export of products of N2 fixation, and the accumulation of these products would inhibit nitrogenase activity. Others have suggested that N2 fixation in legumes might be regulated by a feedback mechanism involving N metabolism and the pool of reduced N in the plant (Silsbury et al., 1986; Parsons et al., 1993; Hartwig et al., 1994). Oti-Boateng and Silsbury (1993) reported an inhibition of nitrogenase activity in fava bean after plant uptake of Asn or Gln.Soybean (Glycine max Merr.) usually exports more than 80% of the N compounds out of the nodules in the form of the ureides Aln and Alac. They are transported in the xylem to the shoots, where they are catabolized (Winkler et al., 1987). High accumulation of petiole ureides has been measured during the inhibition of N2 fixation by drought in both controlled (de Silva et al., 1996; Serraj and Sinclair, 1996a) and field (Purcell et al., 1998) environments. Furthermore, in a comparison of grain legume species, Sinclair and Serraj (1995) reported that those species exporting ureides from the nodules had N2 fixation that was drought sensitive. Those species that exported little or no ureide had N2 fixation that was relatively drought tolerant.An important possibility is that the accumulation of ureides in soybean nodules under soil-water deficits might trigger a feedback mechanism that results in decreased N2 fixation activity (Sinclair and Serraj, 1995; Serraj et al., 1999). This paper reports a series of experiments to investigate the hypothesis of a ureide feedback inhibition of N2 fixation in soybean. First, ureide levels were measured in plant tissue (nodules, roots, and shoots) upon the imposition of water deficits to confirm that ureide levels increased in the nodules themselves, and not just in the shoot. Second, the influence of ureides on nodule activity was examined by introducing ureides, along with other compounds, into soybean plants. These experiments were designed to examine the time course of the response and to determine the concentration response. Third, data were collected to determine if Po and the response of N2 fixation to pO2 were also sensitive to introduced ureides.  相似文献   

16.
The ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid, represented major fractions of the soluble nitrogen pool of nodulated plants of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata [L.] Walp. cv. Caloona) throughout vegetative and reproductive growth. Stem and petioles were the principal sites of ureide accumulation, especially in early fruiting.

Labeling studies using 14CO2 and 15N2 and incubation periods of 25 to 245 minutes indicated that synthesis of allantoin and allantoic acid in root nodules involved currently delivered photosynthate and recently fixed N, and that the ureides were exported from nodule to shoot via the xylem. From 60 to 80% of xylem-borne N consisted of ureides; the remainder was glutamine, asparagine, and amino acids. Allantoin predominated in the soluble N fraction of nodules and fruits, allantoin and allantoic acid were present in approximately equal proportions in xylem exudate, stems, and petioles.

Extracts of the plant tissue fraction of nitrogen-fixing cowpea nodules contained glutamate synthase (EC 2.6.1.53) and glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2), but little activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3). High levels of uricase (EC 1.7.3.3) and allantoinase (EC 3.5.2.5) were also detected. Allantoinase but little uricase was found in extracts of leaflets, pods, and seeds.

Balance sheets were constructed for production, storage, and utilization of ureide N during growth. Virtually all (average 92%) of the ureides exported from roots was metabolized on entering the shoot, the compounds being presumably used as N sources for protein synthesis.

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17.
During early development (up to 18 d after sowing) of nodules of an effective cowpea symbiosis (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp cv. Vita 3: Rhizobium strain CB756), rapidly increasing nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activity and leghaemoglobin content were accompanied by rapid increases in activities of glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2), glutamate synthase (EC 2.6.1.53), enzymes of denovo purine synthesis (forming inosine monophosphate) xanthine oxidoreductase (EC 1.2.3.2), urate oxidase (EC 1.7.3.3), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) and led to increased export of ureides (allantoin and allantoic acid) to the shoot of the host plant in the xylem. Culturing plants with the nodulated root systems maintained in the absence of N2 (in 80 Ar: 20 O2, v/v) had little effect on the rates of induction and increase in nitrogenase activity and leghaemoglobin content but, in the absence of N2 fixation and consequent ammonia production by bacteroids, there was no stimulation of activity of enzymes of ammonia assimilation or of the synthesis of purines or ureides. Addition of NO 3 - (0.1–0.2 mM) relieved host-plant nitrogen deficiency caused by the Ar: O2 treatment but failed to increase levels of enzymes of N metabolism in either the bacteroid or the plant-cell fractions of the nodule. Premature senescence in Ar: O2-grown nodules occurred at 18–20 d after sowing, and resulted in reduced levels of nitrogenase activity and leghaemoglobin but increased the activity of hydroxybutyrate oxidoreductase (EC 1.1.1.30).  相似文献   

18.
Soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr) were grown in sand culture with 2 millimolar nitrate for 37 days and then supplied with 15 millimolar nitrate for 7 days. Control plants received 2 millimolar nitrate and 13 millimolar chloride and, after the 7-day treatment period, all plants were supplied with nil nitrate. The temporary treatment with high nitrate inhibited nitrogenase (acetylene reduction) activity by 80% whether or not Rhizobium japonicum bacteroids had nitrate reductase (NR) activity. The pattern of nitrite accumulation in nodules formed by NR+ rhizobia was inversely related to the decrease and recovery of nitrogenase activity. However, nitrite concentration in nodules formed by NR rhizobia appeared to be too low to explain the inhibition of nitrogenase. Carbohydrate composition was similar in control nodules and nodules receiving 15 millimolar nitrate suggesting that the inhibition of nitrogenase by nitrate was not related to the availability of carbohydrate.

Nodules on plants treated with 15 millimolar nitrate contained higher concentrations of amino N and, especially, ureide N than control nodules and, after withdrawal of nitrate, reduced N content of treated and control nodules returned to similar levels. The accumulation of N2 fixation products in nodules in response to high nitrate treatment was observed with three R. japonicum strains, two NR+ and one NR. The high nitrate treatment did not affect the allantoate/allantoin ratio or the proportion of amino N or ureide N in bacteroids (4%) and cytosol (96%).

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19.
C. A. Atkins 《Plant and Soil》1987,100(1-3):157-169
Summary Nitrogen (N2) fixed by Rhizobium bacteroids in the legume nodule is excreted as ammonia to the surrounding host cell where it is efficiently assimilated into the amide group of glutamine. Generally glutamine is a minor exported solute of nitrogen, being further metabolised to asparagine in temperate species and to the ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid in tropical species. These solutes serve as the principal translocated forms of nitrogen in xylem. Compartmentalisation of the pathways of nitrogen metabolism and the role of ammonia in regulation of their activity is examined in nodules of both asparagine-forming (Lupinus albus L.) and ureide-forming (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp) symbioses.  相似文献   

20.
Nodulated and denodulated roots of adzuki bean (Vigna angularis), soybean (Glycine max), and alfalfa (Medicago sativa) were exposed to 14CO2 to investigate the contribution of nodule CO2 fixation to assimilation and transport of fixed nitrogen. The distribution of radioactivity in xylem sap and partitioning of carbon fixed by nodules to the whole plant were measured. Radioactivity in the xylem sap of nodulated soybean and adzuki bean was located primarily (70 to 87%) in the acid fraction while the basic (amino acid) fraction contained 10 to 22%. In contrast, radioactivity in the xylem sap of nodulated alfalfa was primarily in amino acids with about 20% in organic acids. Total ureide concentration was 8.1, 4.7, and 0.0 micromoles per milliliter xylem sap for soybean, adzuki bean, and alfalfa, respectively. While the major nitrogen transport products in soybeans and adzuki beans are ureides, this class of metabolites contained less than 20% of the total radioactivity. When nodules of plants were removed, radioactivity in xylem sap decreased by 90% or more. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that CO2 fixed by nodules was rapidly transported to shoots and incorporated into acid stable constituents. The data are consistent with a role for nodule CO2 fixation providing carbon for the assimilation and transport of fixed nitrogen in amide-based legumes. In contrast, CO2 fixation by nodules of ureide transporting legumes appears to contribute little to assimilation and transport of fixed nitrogen.  相似文献   

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