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1.
Liao  M. T.  Hedley  M. J.  Woolley  D. J.  Brooks  R. R  Nichols  M. A. 《Plant and Soil》2000,223(1-2):245-254
The effect of rooting media Cu concentration (0.05–20 mg Cu L-1) on amino acid concentrations and copper speciation in the xylem sap of chicory and tomato plants was measured using 6 week old plants grown in a nutrient film technique system (NFT). Irrespective of the Cu concentration in the nutrient solutions, more than 99.68% and 99.74% of total Cu in tomato and chicory xylem sap was in a bound form. When exposed to high Cu concentrations in the rooting media, amino acid concentrations in the sap increased. Relative to other amino acids, the concentrations of glutamine (Gln), histidine (His), asparagine (Asn), valine (Val), nicotianamine (NA) and proline (Pro) in tomato xylem saps, and His, γ-aminobutyric acid (Gaba), glutamic acid (Glu), leucine (Leu), NA and phenylalanine (Phe) in chicory xylem saps showed the greatest increases. The data indicate that induced synthesis of some free amino acids as a specific and proportional response to Cu treatment. For a single complexation amino acid, the solution Cu2+concentration vs pH titration curve for NA at 0.06–0.07 mM was most similar, closely followed by His at 0.5–0.6 mM, to the solution Cu2+concentration behaviour in both tomato and chicory xylem sap. It is concluded that increased Cu concentrations in the rooting media induced selective synthesis of certain amino acid which include NA, His, Asn and Gln which have high stability constants with Cu. NA and His have the highest binding constants for Cu and the concentrations of NA and His in chicory and tomato xylem saps can account for all the bound Cu carried in the sap. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

2.
Cycling of amino compounds in symbiotic lupin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The composition of amino acids was determined in the xylem andphloem sap of symbiotic lupins grown under a variety of treatmentsdesigned to alter the rate of nitrogen fixation. Asparaginewas the major amino acid in both xylem and phloem with glutamine,glutamate and aspartate also major components. GABA had a highconcentration in the xylem while valine was a major componentin the phloem. Exposure to combined nitrogen in the form ofeither ammonium or nitrate caused a reduction in specific nitrogenaseactivity and was associated with subsequent changes in bothof the translocated saps. Inhibiting nitrogen fixation by exposingnodules to oxygen produced a lower amide to amine ratio in thexylem sap (1.3:1) compared with control and nitrate ratios (2.6:1)and ammonium ratios (7.1:1). Similar ratios for amide aminewere also observed in the phloem sap. Labelling studies using15N2 to follow nitrogen fixation, ammonium assimilation andamino acid transport have shown rapid accumulation of labelinto glutamine with subsequent enrichment in glutamate, aspartate,alanine, and GABA. Asparagine was found in high concentrationsin nodules and became slowly enriched. Labelled nitrogen fixedand assimilated in nodules was detected 40 min later in stemxylem extracts, largely as the amides glutamine and asparagine.These experiments provide evidence that large amounts of nitrogenouscompounds are cycled through the root nodules of symbiotic plants(contributing approximately 50% of xylem N) and that differencesin the composition of the phloem sap may influence nodule growthand activity. Key words: Nitrogen fixation, nitrogen translocation, isotope labelling, legumes, GC-MS  相似文献   

3.
The amino acid composition of endosperm cavity sap and of sieve tube saps from the flag leaf, peduncle, rachis, grain pedicel, and grain were determined for wheat plants just past the mid-half of grain filling. On a mole percent basis, glutamine accounted for almost half of the amino acids in sieve tube sap from the peduncle and ear. Other protein amino acids, plug γ-aminobutyrate, were present in varying, but mostly low (a few mole percent) proportions. The amino acid composition of phloem exudate resembled that of the mature wheat grain. The proportions of amino acids in the endosperm cavity were generally similar to those of the sieve tube sap supplying the grain. Cysteine, however, while virtually absent from sieve tube sap, comprised 1 to 2 mole percent of amino acids in the endosperm cavity, suggesting it is transported in a different form. Also, alanine and, to a lesser extent, glutamate were relatively more prominent in endosperm cavity sap than in the sieve tube sap. Thus, while most amino acids were more concentrated in the sieve tube sap than in the endosperm cavity sap, alanine and glutamate appeared to be moving from the sieve tube to the endosperm cavity in the absence of, or perhaps even against, their concentration gradients.  相似文献   

4.
A technique is described for collecting bleeding saps from thepetioles of defoliated plants of the field pea. Analytical studiesand 14CO2-feeding experiments indicate that these saps are physicallyrelated to the fluids delivered to the xylem by the nodulatedroot. There is a progressive decrease in the concentration ofamino-nitrogen in the bleeding saps recovered from the successivepetioles up a stem. This decrease is manifest at any time ofthe day or night and is evident in all ages of plants. It issuggested that it results from the accumulation of a proportionof the incoming amino-acids and amides in living tissues ofthe stem. As the stem ages, it appears to become less effectivein abstracting materials from the xylem. Stem tissues oftenshow a more intensive uptake of asparagine than of other constituentssuch as aspartic acid, glutamine, and homoserine. The abovestudies suggest that much of the nitrogen coming from the rootis immediately sequestered by the lower half of the shoot. Asimilar effect is observed if 14Clabelled bleeding sap is fedto complete, unlabelled shoots via the transpiration stream.  相似文献   

5.
The cotyledons of castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) act as absorption organs for amino acids, which are supplied to the medium. The analysis of the sieve-tube sap, which exudes from the cut hypocotyl, demonstrated the ability of the cotyledons to load particular amino acids into the phloem and to reject the loading of others. The sieve-tube sap of cotyledons, which were embedded in the endosperm, contained 150 mM amino acids, with 50 mM glutamine as the major amino acid, and 10–15 mM each of valine, isoleucine, lysine and arginine. Removal of the endosperm led to a drastic decline in the amino-acid content of sieve-tube sap down to 16 mM. Addition of single amino acid species to the medium increased the amino acid concentration in the sieve-tube sap in specific manner: glutamine caused the largest increase (up to 140 mM in exudate), glutamate and alanine smaller increases (up to 60 mM), and arginine the smallest. In addition, the amino acid composition of the sieve-tube sap changed, for instance, glutamine or alanine readily appeared in the sieve-tube sap upon incubation in glutamine or alanine, respectively, whereas glutamate was hardly discernible even in the case of incubation with glutamate; arginine was loaded into the sieve tubes only reluctantly. In general, glutamine and alanine accumulated four- to tenfold in the sieve tubes. The uptake of amino acids and of sucrose into the sieve tubes was interdependent: the loading of sucrose strongly reduced the amino acid concentration in the sieve-tube exudate and loading of amino acids decreased the sucrose concentration. Comparison of the concentrations of various amino acids on their way from the endosperm via the cotyledon-endosperm interface, through the cotyledons and into the sieve tubes showed that glutamine, valine, isoleucine and lysine are accumulated on this pathway, whereas glutamate and arginine are more concentrated in the cotyledons than in the sieve tubes. Obviously the phloem-loading system has a transport specificity different from that of the amino acid uptake system of the cotyledon in general and it strongly discriminates between amino acids within the cotyledons.  相似文献   

6.
The amino acid compositions of the root xylem saps of Olax phyllanthi and a range of its common hosts were examined in native coastal heath in Western Australia and in pot cultures of Olax reliant on single hosts. When hosts specializing in the xylem transport of one major solute (asparagine, glutamine, histidine, arginine or proline) were exploited, the endophytic tissue of haustoria and the xylem sap of Olax showed much lower proportions of this than of other solutes, suggesting pronounced metabolic transformation prior to xylem loading by the parasite. However, the xylem sap of Olax did partly reflect the compositions of its hosts; for example, djenkolic acid and pipecolic acid were present when Olax was parasitic on species of Acacia, and levels of citrulline and aspartic acid were higher than normal when it exploited hosts transporting large amounts of these compounds. Back-flow of S-ethenyl cysteine, a novel amino acid specific to Olax, was observed to another root hemiparasite (Exocarpos sparteus) in native habitat and to certain non-parasitic hosts in water-stressed pot cultures. Haustoria exhibited high levels of glutamine synthetase but showed appreciable in vivo nitrate reductase activity only when on hosts with high xylem levels of nitrate.  相似文献   

7.
Nitrogen fixation of terrestrial legumes is strongly and rapidly diminished under flooding. Although recovery is possible with the formation of aerenchyma, information is scarce regarding recovery after draining following short-term flooding, before the appearance of morphological adaptations. This study used soybean (Glycine max) plants nodulated with Bradyrhizobium elkanii to determine xylem sap glutamine as an indication of nitrogen fixation activity during recovery from different periods of flooding. Xylem glutamine levels showed rapid recovery (within 90 min) following periods of flooding up to 4 h. Recovery was progressively slower after longer periods of flooding. After 48 h flooding very little recovery could be observed within the first 120 min after draining but recovery was possible within 48 h. Consistent with the changes in xylem glutamine, direct measurements of apparent nitrogenase activity carried out immediately on draining revealed rapid recovery after flooding for 1 h and slow recovery following 48 h of flooding. In the latter case, nitrogenase activity largely recovered 24 h after draining. Experiments with 15N2 incorporation into amino acids exported in the xylem sap revealed that glutamine was by far the most highly labelled amino acid in sap collected over the first 30 min of exposure to the isotope. This is conclusive evidence that xylem sap glutamine is an immediate product of N2 fixation and export. The changes in xylem sap glutamine seen on flooding (decline) and after draining (recovery) can therefore be attributed to changes in nitrogenase activity. The data show that xylem sap glutamine is a useful means for assessing changes in nitrogenase activity, especially when the root system is submersed in water and activity cannot be measured directly.  相似文献   

8.
Nickel speciation was studied in the xylem sap of Alyssum serpyllifolium ssp. lusitanicum, a Ni-hyperaccumulator endemic to the serpentine soils of northeast Portugal. The xylem sap was collected from plants growing in its native habitat and characterized in terms of carboxylic and amino acids content. The speciation of nickel was studied in model and real solutions of xylem sap by voltammetric titrations using Square Wave Voltammetry (SWV). The results showed that Ni transport in the xylem sap occurs mainly as a free hydrated cation (about 70%) and complexed with carboxylic acids, mainly citric acid (18%). Altogether, oxalic acid, malic acid, malonic acid and aspartic acid complexed less than 13% of total Ni. A negligible amount bounded to the amino acids, like glutamic acid and glutamine (<1%). Histidine did not play a role in Ni translocation in the xylem sap of A. serpyllifolium under field conditions. Amino acids are one of the main forms of N transport in the xylem sap, and under field conditions, N is usually a limited nutrient. We hypothesize that the translocation of Ni in the xylem sap as a free ion or chelated with carboxylic acids is ‘cheaper’ in terms of N resources.  相似文献   

9.
Certain amino acids inhibit growth of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. var. xanthi), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) carrot (Daucus carota), and soybean (Glycerine max L. co. Mandarin) cell cultures when nitrate or urea are the nitrogen sources but not when ammonia is the nitrogen source. These amino acids also inhibit development of nitrate reductase activity (NADH:nitrate oxidoreductase EC 1.6.6.1) in tobacco and tomato cultures. Threonine, the most inhibitory amino acid, also inhibits nitrate uptake in tobacco cells. Arginine, and some other amino acids, abolish the inhibition effects caused by other amino acids. We suggest that amino acids inhibit assimilation of intracellular ammonium into amino acids in cells grown on nitrate or urea.  相似文献   

10.
Roles of organic acids and nitrate in the long-distance transport of cobalt (Co) in xylem saps of hyperaccumulator Alyssum murale and non-hyperaccumulator Trifolium subterraneum were studied under hydroponic conditions. Organic acids (oxalic, malic, malonic, citric, and fumaric) and nitrate in xylem sap samples were separated and determined simultaneously by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography after solid-phase extraction with nanosized hydroxyapatite. Results indicated that Co treatment significantly increased the concentrations of xylem oxalic and malic acids for the hyperaccumulator A. murale compared to the control but significantly decreased the concentrations of xylem nitrate and malonic acid; concentrations of citric acid in xylem sap samples did not show significant difference between the control and Co treatments. By analyzing the relationship between the concentrations of organic acids, nitrate, and concentrations of Co in xylem saps, it could be concluded that oxalic and malic acids in xylem saps seemed to participate in the long-distance Co translocation process, and citric acid did not relate to the xylem Co transport of A. murale and T. subterraneum. Our work might be very useful for understanding the mechanism of long-distance transport of heavy metals in hyperaccumulator.  相似文献   

11.
Stewart CR  Beevers H 《Plant physiology》1967,42(11):1587-1595
During germination of the castor bean all of the contents of the endosperm are ultimately transported to the embryo through the cotyledon or respired. A net loss of nitrogen from the endosperm begins about the fourth day, i.e. at the time when embryo growth and fat breakdown are also beginning. Amino acid analysis of the exudate from the cotyledons, still enclosed in the endosperm, showed that the amounts of aspartate, glutamate, glycine, and alanine were very low and that glutamine made up 40% of the amino acids in the exudate.

Amino acids labeled with 14C were applied to intact excised endosperms to follow utilization. Aspartate, glutamate, alanine, glycine, serine, and leucine were converted to sugar to varying extents. Proline, arginine, valine, and phenylalanine were not appreciably converted to sugars. Proline and glutamate were converted to glutamine. When 14C-glutamate, aspartate, and alanine were added to the outer endosperm of intact seedlings, only sugars and glutamine contained appreciable label in the exudate. When 14C-valine was added, it was virtually the only labeled compound in the exudate.

The results show that amino acids which on deamination can give rise to intermediates in the pathway of conversion of fat to sucrose are largely converted to sucrose and the nitrogen transported as glutamine. Other amino acids released from the endosperm protein are transported intact into the seedling axis. Some carbon from the gluconeogenic amino acids is also transported as glutamine.

  相似文献   

12.
Sieve tube sap was obtained from Tanacetum by aphid stylectomy and from Ricinus after apical bud decapitation. The amino acids in sieve tube sap were analyzed and compared with those from leaves. Arginine and lysine accumulated in the sieve tube sap of Tanacetum more than 10‐fold compared to the leaf extracts and they were, together with asparagine and serine, preferably selected into the sieve tube sap, whereas glycine, methionine/tryptophan and γ‐amino butyric acid were partially or completely excluded. The two basic amino acids also showed a close covariation in sieve tube sap. The acidic amino acids also grouped together, but antagonistic to the other amino acids. The accumulation ratios between sieve tube sap and leaf extracts were smaller in Ricinus than in Tanacetum. Arginine, histidine, lysine and glutamine were enriched and preferentially loaded into the phloem, together with isoleucine and valine. In contrast, glycine and methionine/tryptophan were partially and γ‐amino butyric acid almost completely excluded from sieve tube sap. The covariation analysis grouped arginine together with several neutral amino acids. The acidic amino acids were loaded under competition with neutral amino acids. It is concluded from comparison with the substrate specificities of already characterized plant amino acid transporters, that an AtCAT1‐like transporter functions in phloem loading of basic amino acids, whereas a transporter like AtGAT1 is absent in phloem. Although Tanacetum and Ricinus have different minor vein architecture, their phloem loading specificities for amino acids are relatively similar.  相似文献   

13.
Xylem sap was extracted from cut branches of stone-fruit and pip-fruit trees at different times of the year, and analysed for nitrogen and carbohydrate content. Growth of Stereum purpureum was measured in the different sap samples in vitro. Nitrogen and carbohydrate levels in xylem sap from peach trees were highest in late winter and early spring, and these samples supported most growth of S. purpureum. At full bloom the levels of nitrogen and carbohydrate in xylem sap from stone-fruits (peach, nectarine, plum, cherry) were several times greater than in sap from pip-fruits (apple, pear), and the growth of S. purpureum in sap from stone-fruits was approximately ten times that in sap from pip-fruits. The results suggest that seasonal variations in susceptibility of stone-fruits to silver-leaf disease, and the greater susceptibility of stone-fruits than of pip-fruits, are due to differential ability of their xylem saps to support growth of S. purpureum.  相似文献   

14.
Wild Type (WT) and transgenic tobacco plants expressing isopentenyltransferase (IPT), a gene encoding the enzyme regulating the rate-limiting step in cytokinins (CKs) synthesis, were grown under limited nitrogen (N) conditions. We analyzed nitrogen forms, nitrogen metabolism related-enzymes, amino acids and photorespiration related-enzymes in WT and PSARK∷IPT tobacco plants. Our results indicate that the WT plants subjected to N deficiency displayed reduced nitrate (NO3) assimilation. However, an increase in the production of ammonium (NH4+), by the degradation of proteins and photorespiration led to an increase in the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase (GS/GOGAT) cycle in WT plants. In these plants, the amounts of amino acids decreased with N deficiency, although the relative amounts of glutamate and glutamine increased with N deficiency. Although the transgenic plants expressing PSARK∷IPT and growing under suboptimal N conditions displayed a significant decline in the N forms in the leaf, they maintained the GS/GOGAT cycle at control levels. Our results suggest that, under N deficiency, CKs prevented the generation and assimilation of NH4+ by increasing such processes as photorespiration, protein degradation, the GS/GOGAT cycle, and the formation of glutamine.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The role of the host in the nitrogen nutrition of Striga hermonthica (Del.) Benth. (Scrophulariaceae) parasitic on Sorghum bicolor cv. SH4 Arval has been investigated using (15)N-nitrate as the tracer. It is shown that, when nitrate is absorbed only by the roots of the host plant, a rapid transfer of nitrogen to the parasite can be detected. The xylem sap of S. hermonthica contained approximately equal amounts of nitrate and amino acids, mostly glutamine and asparagine. Infection altered the free amino acid profile of the host tissues, leading notably to a large increase in asparagine and a decrease in glutamine. The haustoria of S. hermonthica, although rich in nitrate, showed a low concentration of free amino acids, particularly lacking in asparagine and glutamine. The roots of S. hermonthica, in contrast, were rich in both asparagine and glutamine while, in the shoots, asparagine constituted 80% of the total FAA pool. Asparagine was also found to be the primary (15)N-enriched amino acid in the shoots of S. hermonthica while, interestingly, it was glutamate that was most strongly enriched in the roots. It is concluded that nitrogen nutrition in S. hermonthica is based on a supply of both nitrate and amino acids from the host. This implies a non-specific transfer in the transpiration stream. Nitrate reduction probably occurs mainly in the leaves of the parasite. Assimilation also occurs in S. hermonthica and excess nitrogen is stored as the non-toxic nitrogen-rich compound, asparagine. This specific trait of nitrogen metabolism of the parasite is discussed in relation to the effect of nitrogen fertilization on reducing infestation.  相似文献   

17.
To analyse the molecular mechanisms of phytoplasma pathogenicity, the comprehensive metabolomic changes of mulberry leaf and phloem sap in response to phytoplasma infection were examined using gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry. The metabolic profiles obtained revealed that the metabolite compositions of leaf and phloem sap were different, and phytoplasma infection has a greater impact on the metabolome of phloem sap than of leaf. Phytoplasma infection brought about the content changes in various metabolites, such as carbohydrates, amino acids, organic acids, etc. Meanwhile, the results of biochemical analysis showed that the degradation of starch was repressed, and the starch content was increased in the infected leaves. In addition, we found that phytoplasma infection changed the levels of abscisic acid and cytokinin and break phytohormone balance. Interestingly, our data showed that the contents of H2O2 and superoxide were increased in the infected leaves, but not in the phloem saps. Based on the results, the expression levels of the genes involved in the metabolism of some changed metabolites were examined, and the potential molecular mechanisms of these changes were discussed. It can be concluded that both the leaf and phloem saps have a complicated metabolic response to phytoplasma infection, but their response mechanisms were different.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Comparisons were made of the levels of various solutes in xylem (tracheal) sap and fruit tip phloem sap of Lupinus albus (L.) and Spartium junceum (L.). Sucrose was present at high concentration (up to 220 mg ml-1) in phloem but was absent from xylem whereas nitrate was detected in xylem (up to 0.14 mg ml-1) but not in phloem. Total amino acids reached 0.5–2.5 mg ml-1 (in xylem) versus 16–40 mg ml-1 in phloem. Phloem: xylem concentration ratios for mineral nutrients (K, Na, Mg, Ca, Fe, Zn, Mn, Cu) spanned the range 0.7 to 20, the ratios generally reflecting an element's phloem mobility and its availability to the xylem from the roots.The accessibility of nitrate to xylem and phloem was studied in Lupinus. Increasing the nitrate supply to roots from 100 to 1000 mg NO3–Nl-1 increased nitrate spill over into xylem, but nitrate always failed to appear in phloem. However, phloem loading of small amounts of nitrate was induced by feeding 750 or 1000 mg NO3–Nl-1 directly to cut shoots via the transpiration stream. Transfer of reduced nitrogen to phloem was demonstrated by feeding 15NO3 to shoots and recovering 15N-enriched amides and amino acids in phloem sap. Increased nitrate supply to roots led to increased amino acid levels in xylem and phloem but did not alter markedly the balance between individual amino acids.The fate of xylem-fed 14C-labelled asparagine, glutamine and aspartic acid and of photosynthetically fed 14CO2 was studied in Spartium, with reference to phloem transport to seeds. Substantial fractions of the 14C of all sources appeared in non-amino compounds. [14C]asparagine passed largely in unchanged form to the phloem whereas the 14C from aspartic acid or glutamine appeared in phloem attached to other amino acids (e.g. asparagine and glutamic acid). Serine, asparagine and glutamine were the main amino compounds labelled in phloem sap after feeding 14CO2. The wide distribution of 14C amongst free and bound amino acids of seeds suggested that extensive metabolism of phloem-borne solutes occurred in the fruits.  相似文献   

19.
Rapid direct conversion of exogenously supplied [14C]aspartate to [14C] asparagine and to tricarboxylic cycle acids was observed in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) nodules. Aspartate aminotransferase activity readily converted carbon from exogenously applied [14C]aspartate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle with subsequent conversion to the organic acids malate, succinate, and fumarate. Aminooxyacetate, an inhibitor of aminotransferase activity, reduced the flow of carbon from [14C]aspartate into tricarboxylic cycle acids and decreased 14CO2 evolution by 99%. Concurrently, maximum conversion of aspartate to asparagine was observed in aminooxyacetate treated nodules (30 nanomoles asparagine per gram fresh weight per hour. Metabolism of [14C]aspartate and distribution of nodulefixed 14CO2 suggest that two pools of aspartate occur in alfalfa nodules: (a) one involved in asparagine biosynthesis, and (b) another supplying a malate/aspartate shuttle. Conversion of [14C]aspartate to [14C]asparagine was not inhibited by methionine sulfoximine, a glutamine synthetase inhibitor, or azaserine, a glutmate synthetase, inhibitor. The data did not indicate that asparagine biosynthesis in alfalfa nodules has an absolute requirement for glutamine. Radioactivity in the xylem sap, derived from nodule 14CO2 fixation, was markedly decreased by treating nodulated roots with aminooxyacetate, methionine sulfoximine, and azaserine. Inhibitors decreased the [14C]aspartate and [14]asparagine content of xylem sap by greater than 80% and reduced the total amino nitrogen content of xylem sap (including nonradiolabeled amino acids) by 50 to 80%. Asparagine biosynthesis in alfalfa nodules and transport in xylem sap are dependent upon continued aminotransferase activity and an uninterrupted assimilation of ammonia via the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase pathway. Continued assimilation of ammonia apparently appears crucial to continued root nodule CO2 fixation in alfalfa.  相似文献   

20.
The paper presents the results of amino acid analyses in xylem sap during leaf regrowth of ryegrass plants defoliated firstly at the 8th and secondly at the 12th week of culture. The free amino acid composition of leaves, stubble and roots was also determined and some of the results are reported. Prior to defoliation, xylem sap contained a high proportion of amides, particularly glutamine. During regrowth after defoliation, the proportion of asparagine in the xylem sap increased until the third day when the highest ratios of asparagine/glutamine appeared. The results are compared with relative amounts of free amino acids in the different plant parts and discussed in relation to source-sink nitrogen transfer.  相似文献   

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