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1.
Incorporation of 15N into allantoin and allantoic acid in noduleswas higher than that in roots. This confirms that nodules produceallantoin. The 15N concentration in allantoin was slightly higherthan that in allantoic acid, suggesting that allantoin decomposedto allantoic acid. Allantoin and allantoic acid in nodules weretranslocated rapidly to roots. (Received August 25, 1976; )  相似文献   

2.
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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3.
Legumes can access atmospheric nitrogen through a symbiotic relationship with nitrogen‐fixing bacteroids that reside in root nodules. In soybean, the products of fixation are the ureides allantoin and allantoic acid, which are also the dominant long‐distance transport forms of nitrogen from nodules to the shoot. Movement of nitrogen assimilates out of the nodules occurs via the nodule vasculature; however, the molecular mechanisms for ureide export and the importance of nitrogen transport processes for nodule physiology have not been resolved. Here, we demonstrate the function of two soybean proteins – GmUPS1‐1 (XP_003516366) and GmUPS1‐2 (XP_003518768) – in allantoin and allantoic acid transport out of the nodule. Localization studies revealed the presence of both transporters in the plasma membrane, and expression in nodule cortex cells and vascular endodermis. Functional analysis in soybean showed that repression of GmUPS1‐1 and GmUPS1‐2 in nodules leads to an accumulation of ureides and decreased nitrogen partitioning to roots and shoot. It was further demonstrated that nodule development, nitrogen fixation and nodule metabolism were negatively affected in RNAi UPS1 plants. Together, we conclude that export of ureides from nodules is mediated by UPS1 proteins, and that activity of the transporters is not only essential for shoot nitrogen supply but also for nodule development and function.  相似文献   

4.
Nodulated soybean plants contain high concentration of allantoin in all parts. Excision of nodules from the roots brought about a marked decrease in allantoin. To examine the function of nodules in allantoin production, nodulated and nodule-detached soybeans were fed with 15NH3 for 1 week. High abundance of 15N was found in the amino acid-N fraction of both plants. In the root and stem of the nodulated plants, ca 80% of the nitrogen in this fraction was derived from the NH3 added in the medium. Excess 15N was detected also in allantoin-N fraction, but the 15N content was very low in contrast to that in amino acid-N fraction. The site involved in the allantoin formation and the possible significance of its synthesis are discussed in relation to symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

5.
Distribution and change in contents of allantoin1 in each organof nodulating variety, A62-1, and non-nodulating variety, A62-2,of soybean plants were measured over the growth period, andthe physiological significance of allantoin in soybean plantsis discussed. Allantoin in the cotyledons of both varieties increased andthen decreased in the germination stage. The allantoin levelin stems, roots and nodules of A62-1 was raised with the growthand attained a maximum at the green pod stage and then decreased.On the other hand, those organs of A62-2 accumulated littleallantoin over the growth period. The allantoin level in thestems of A62-1 was the highest compared with other organs. Inthe leaves of A62-1, the level was higher in the developingleaves than lower mature leaves. The level decreased just beforethe end of leaf development and became trace in the lower fullydeveloped leaves. The allantoin level in the pods of A62-1 duringthe young stage was fairly high; whereas that of A62-2 was lowbut significant, and then decreased with maturing. The dry seedsin both varieties showed low levels. Allantoin was concluded to be accumulated in roots and stemsof developing soybean plants bearing nodules and then decreasedin the stage of seed formation. 1 In this article the sum of allantoin and allantoic acid ismeasured. Therefore, the expression "allantoin" in the textand abstract includes allantoic acid. (Received August 19, 1976; )  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Some studies on the effects of xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol [4-hydroxypyrazolo(3,4-d)pyrimidine] on allantoin metabolism of soybean plants (Glycine max cv. Tamanishiki) are reported. Soybean seedlings, aseptically germinated for 96 hours on agar containing 1 millimolar allopurinol, contained only slight amounts of allantoin, allantoic acid, and urea as compared with controls. Analysis of purines and pyrimidines of the allopurinol-treated seedlings showed marked accumulation of xanthine both in the cotyledons and seedling axes. No hypoxanthine accumulation was found. Xanthine accumulation due to allopurinol treatment was relatively low after the cotyledons had fallen. For nodulated plants, allopurinol caused a significant drop in allantoin (+allantoic acid) in the stems and nodules, accompanied by a striking accumulation of xanthine in the nodules. The xanthine concentration in the nodules far exceeded that in the germinated seedlings. Allopurinol at a concentration of 50 micromolar strongly inhibited xanthine oxidase prepared from soybean nodules.

The results suggested that the main pathway of allantoin formation in soybean plants was through purine decomposition, via xanthine-uric acid. It was specially noted that a very active purine-decomposing system existed in soybean nodules.

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8.
J A Bell  M A Webb 《Plant physiology》1995,107(2):435-441
Allantoinase (allantoin amidohydrolase, EC 3.5.2.5) catalyzes the conversion of allantoin to allantoic acid in the final step of ureide biogenesis. We have purified allantoinase more than 4000-fold by immunoaffinity chromatography from root nodules and cotyledons of soybean (Glycine max [L] Merr.). We characterized and compared properties of the enzyme from the two sources. Seed and nodule allantoinases had 80% identity in the first 24 amino acid residues of the N terminus. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of the purified enzymes showed that multiple forms were present in each. Allantoinases from nodules and cotyledons had very low affinity for allantoin with a Km for allantoin of 17.3 mM in cotyledons and 24.4 mM in nodules. Both had activity in a broad range of pH values from 6.5 to 7.5. In addition, purified allantoinase from both sources was very heat stable. Enzyme activity was stable after 1 h at 70 degrees C, decreased gradually with heating to 85 degrees C, and was lost at 90 to 95 degrees C. Although these studies have revealed some differences between allantoinases in seeds and nodules, the differences were not reflected in key enzyme properties. The immunoaffinity approach enabled purification of allantoinase from soybean root nodules and simplified its purification from cotyledons, thereby allowing characterization and comparison of the enzyme from the two sources.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of thiourea on ureide metabolism in Neurospora crassa   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The wild-type strain of Neurospora crassa Em 5297a can utilize allantoin as a sole nitrogen source. The pathway of allantoin utilization is via its conversion into allantoic acid and urea, followed by the breakdown of urea to ammonia. This is shown by the inability of the urease-less mutant, N. crassa 1229, to grow on allantoin as a sole nitrogen source and by the formation of allantoate and urea by pre-formed mycelia of this mutant. In the wild strain (Em 5297a) thiourea is tenfold more toxic on an allantoin medium than on an inorganic nitrogen medium; allantoin as well as urea counteract thiourea toxicity in the allantoin nitrogen medium. This selective toxicity of thiourea for the mould utilizing allantoin nitrogen does not, however, result in an impairment of allantoin uptake, allantoinase activity or the formation of urea from allantoin. The only process affected by thiourea is the synthesis of urease; urea antagonizes this effect of thiourea in N. crassa.  相似文献   

10.
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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11.
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   

12.
Symbiotic nitrogen fixation of Rhizobium meliloti bacteroids in Medicago sativa root nodules was suppressed by several inorganic nitrogen sources. Amino acids like glutamine, glutamic acid and aspartic acid, which can serve as sole nitrogen sources for the unnodulated plant did not influence nitrogenase activity of effective nodules, even at high concentrations.Ammonia and nitrate suppressed symbiotic nitrogen fixation in vivo only at concentrations much higher than those needed for suppression of nitrogenase activity in free living nitrogen fixing bacteria. The kinetics of suppression were slow compared with that of free living nitrogen fixing bacteria. On the other hand, nitrite, which acts as a direct inhibitor of nitrogenase, suppressed very quickly and at low concentrations. Glutamic acid and glutamine enhanced the effect of ammonia dramatically, while the suppression by nitrate was enhanced only slightly.  相似文献   

13.
Allantoin and allantoic acid are investigated in the faeces and tissues of the developing sixth instar larva of the moth, Orthaga exvinacea. The nitrogen excreted as allantoin and allantoic acid is compared with nitrogen excreted as uric acid and ammonia. The larva excretes 2.35–5.14 μmol/g allantoin and 0.74–1.34 μmol/g allantoic acid which account for 0.83 to 2.39% and 0.23 to 0.53%, respectively, of the excreted total nitrogen. Allantoin and allantoic acid are found to be minor nitrogenous end-products of the larva. Allantoin and allantoic acid are also present in the haemolymph and fat body of the larva in varying concentrations. The level of allantoin in the haemolymph shows a negative correlation with the allantoin concentration of faeces and fat body. The allantoin is found to be stored in the fat body at a low level. The results of the present study also indicate the coexistence of uric acid storage and uricolysis.  相似文献   

14.
Transfer of the nitrogen and carbon of allantoin to amino acids and protein of leaflets, stems and petioles, apices, peduncles, pods, and seeds of detached shoots of nodulated cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp. cv. Caloona) plants was demonstrated following supply of [2-14C], [1,3-15N]allantoin in the transpiration stream. Throughout vegetative and reproductive growth all plant organs showed significant ureolytic activity and readily metabolized [2-14C]allantoin to 14CO2. A metabolic pathway for ureide nitrogen utilization via allantoic acid, urea, and ammonia was indicated. Levels of ureolytic activity in extracts from leaves and roots of nodulated cowpea were consistently maintained at higher levels than in non-nodulated, NO3 grown plants.

[14C]Ureides were recovered in extracts of aphids (Aphis craccivora and Macrosiphum euphorbieae) feeding at different sites on cowpea plants supplied with [2-14C]allantoin through the transpiration stream or to the upper surface of single leaflets. The data indicated that the ureides were effectively transferred from xylem or leaf mesophyll to phloem, and then translocated in phloem to fruits, apices, and roots.

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15.
Degradation and utilization of exogenous allantoin by intact soybean root   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Allantoin is produced by soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Harper] nodules during nitrogen fixation. Decomposed nodules, therefore, may release allantoin into the surrounding soil. If the released allantoin were to be taken up by the plant without degradation, it is possible that the exogenous allantoin might repress subsequent nodulation. Using a hydroponic growth system, degradation of exogenous allantoin by soybean root was studied. In the presence of intact soybean root exogenous allantoin was rapidly degraded, yielding ca 2 mmol of urea per mmol of allantoin. Hydrolysis of urea to ammonia proceeded very slowly. Instead, the urea seemed to be taken up by the intact soybean root. The enzyme(s) required for the production of urea from exogenous allantoin could not be detected in the aqueous rooting medium. Therefore, these enzymes seem to be attached to the exterior surface of the intact soybean root. This study shows that exogenous allantoin can be readily degraded and assimilated by the growing soybean plant.  相似文献   

16.
The synthesis of 14C-labeled xanthine/hypoxanthine, uric acid, allantoin, allantoic acid, and urea from [8-14C]guanine or [8-14C]hypoxanthine, but not from [8-14C]adenine, was demonstrated in a cell-free extract from N2-fixing nodules of cowpea (Walp.). The 14C recovered in the acid/neutral fraction was present predominantly in uric acid and allantoin (88-97%), with less than 10% of the 14C in allantoic acid and urea. Time courses of labeling in the cell-free system suggested the sequence of synthesis from guanine to be uric acid, allantoin, and allantoic acid. Ureide synthesis was confined to soluble extracts from the bacteroid-containing tissue, was stimulated by pyridine nucleotides and intermediates of the pathways of aerobic oxidation of ureides, but was completely inhibited by allopurinol, a potent inhibitor of xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37). The data indicated a purine-based pathway for ureide synthesis by cowpea nodules, and this suggestion is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The appearance of enzymes involved in the formation of ureides, allantoin, and allantoic acid, from inosine 5′-monophosphate was analyzed in developing root nodules of soybean (Glycine max). Concomitant with development of effective nodules, a substantial increase in specific activities of the enzymes 5′-nucleotidase (35-fold), purine nucleosidase (10-fold), xanthine dehydrogenase (25-fold), and uricase (200-fold), over root levels was observed. The specific activity of allantoinase remained constant during nodule development. With ineffective nodules the activities were generally lower than in effective nodules; however, the activities of 5′-nucleotidase and allantoinase were 2-fold higher in ineffective nodules unable to synthesize leghemoglobin than in effective nodules. Since the expression of uricase has been shown to be regulated by oxygen (K Larsen, BU Jochimsen 1986 EMBO J 5: 15-19), the expression of the remaining enzymes in the purine catabolic pathway were tested in response to variations in O2 concentration in sterile soybean callus tissue. Purine nucleosidase responded to this treatment, exhibiting a 4-fold increase in activity around 2% O2. 5′-Nucleotidase, xanthine dehydrogenase, and allantoinase remained unaffected by variations in the O2 concentration. Hence, the expression of two enzymes involved in ureide formation, purine nucleosidase and uricase, has been demonstrated to be influenced by O2 concentration.  相似文献   

18.
The metabolism of allantoin by immature cotyledons of soybean (Glycine max L. cv Elf) grown in culture was investigated using solid state 13C and 15N nuclear magnetic resonance. All of the nitrogens of allantoin were incorporated into protein in a manner similar to that of each other and to the amide nitrogen of glutamine. The C-2 of allantoin was not incorporated into cellular material; presumably it was lost as CO2. About 50% of the C-5 of allantoin was incorporated into cellular material as a methylene carbon; the other 50% was presumably also lost as CO2. The 13C-15N bonds of [5-13C;1-15N] and [2-13C;1,3-15N]allantoin were broken prior to the incorporation of the nitrogens into protein. These data are consistent with allantoin's degradation to two molecules of urea and one two-carbon fragment. Cotyledons grown on allantoin as a source of nitrogen accumulated 21% of the nitrogen of cotyledons grown on glutamine. Only 50% of the nitrogen of the degraded allantoin was incorporated into the cotyledon as organic nitrogen; the other 50% was recovered as NH4+ in the media in which the cotyledons had been grown. The latter results suggests that the lower accumulation of nitrogen by cotyledons grown on allantoin was in part due to failure to assimilate NH4+ produced from allantoin. The seed coats had a higher activity of glutamine synthetase and a higher rate of allantoin degradation than cotyledons indicating that seed coats play an important role in the assimilation and degradation of allantoin.  相似文献   

19.
Noel KD  Carneol M  Brill WJ 《Plant physiology》1982,70(5):1236-1241
Nitrate or ammonium was added to soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill cv Corsoy) plants grown in plastic pouches 10 days after nodules first appeared. By the third day of treatment with 10 millimolar nitrate, nitrogenase specific activity (per unit nodule weight) had decreased to 15% to 25% of that of untreated plants. Longer incubations and higher concentrations of nitrate had no greater effect. In addition, exogenous nitrate or ammonium resulted in slower nodule growth and decreased total protein synthesis in both the bacterial and the plant portion of the nodule (as measured by incorporation of 35S). Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed that the nitrogenase components were not repressed or degraded relative to other bacteroid proteins. In the presence of an optimal carbon source, the nitrogenase specific activity of nodules detached from nitrate-treated plants was equivalent to that of nodules from untreated plants. These results are consistent with models that propose decreased availability or utilization of photosynthate in root nodules when legumes are exposed to fixed nitrogen.  相似文献   

20.
Enzymes of ureide synthesis in pea and soybean   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Soybean (Glycine max) and pea (Pisum sativum) differ in the transport of fixed nitrogen from nodules to shoots. The dominant nitrogen transport compounds for soybean are ureides, while amides dominate in pea. A possible enzymic basis for this difference was examined.

The level of enzymes involved in the formation of the ureides allantoin and allantoic acid from inosine 5′-monophosphate (IMP) was compared in different tissues of pea and soybean. Two enzymes, 5′-nucleotidase and uricase, from soybean nodules were found to be 50- and 25-fold higher, respectively, than the level found in pea nodules. Other purine catabolizing enzymes (purine nucleosidase, xanthine dehydrogenase, and allantoinase) were found to be at the same level in the two species. From comparison of enzyme activities in nodules with those from roots, stems, and leaves, two enzymes were found to be nodule specific, namely uricase and xanthine dehydrogenase. The level of enzymes found in the bacteroids indicated no significant contribution of Rhizobium japonicum purine catabolism in the overall formation of ureides in the soybean nodule. The presence in the nodules of purine nucleosidase and ribokinase activities makes a recirculation of the ribose moiety possible. In concert with phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase, ribose becomes available for a new round of purine de novo synthesis, and thereby ureide formation.

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