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1.
The assimilation of nitrate under dark-N2 and dark-O2 conditions in Zea mays leaf tissue was investigated using colourimetric and 15N techniques for the determination of organic and inorganic nitrogen. Studies using 15N indicated that nitrate was assimilated under dark conditions. However, the rate of nitrate assimilation in the dark was only 28% of the rate under non-saturating light conditions. No nitrite accumulated under dark aerobiosis, even though nitrate reduction occurred under these conditions. The pattern of nitrite accumulation in leaf tissue in response to dark-N2 conditions consisted of three phases: an initial lag phase, followed by a period of rapid nitrite accumulation and finally a phase during which the rate of nitrite accumulation declined. After a 1-h period of dark-anaerobiosis, both nitrate reduction and nitrite accumulation declined considerably. However, when O2 was supplied, nitrate reduction was stimulated and the accumulated nitrite was rapidly reduced. Anaerobic conditions stimulated nitrate reduction in leaf tissue after a period of dark-aerobic pretreatment.  相似文献   

2.
The rate of in-vivo nitrate reduction by leaf segments of Zea mays L. was found to decline during the second hour of dark anaerobic treatment. On transfer to oxygen the capacity to reduce nitrate under dark conditions was restored. These observations led to the proposal that nitrate reductase is a regulatory enzyme with ADP acting as a negative effector. The effect of ADP on the invitro activity of nitrate reductase and the changes in the in-vivo adenylate pool under dark-N2 and dark-O2 were investigated. It was found that ADP inhibited the activity of partially purified nitrate reductase. Similarly, the in-vivo anaerobic inhibition of nitrate reduction was associated with a build-up of ADP in the leaf tissue. Under anaerobic conditions nitrite accumulated and on transfer to oxygen the accumulated nitrite was reduced. To explain this phenomenon the following hypothesis was proposed and tested. Under anaerobic conditions the supply of reducing equivalents for nitrite reduction in the plastid becomes restricted and nitrite accumulates as a consequence. On transfer to oxygen this restriction is removed and nitrite disappears. This capacity to reduce accumulated nitrite was found to be dependent on the carbohydrate status of the leaf tissue.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Chaetoceros muelleri (Lemn.) was cultured with nitrite (NO2) or nitrate (NO3) as the sole nitrogen source and aerated with air or with CO2-enriched air. Cells of C. muelleri excreted into the medium nitrite produced by reduction of nitrate when grown with 100 μM NaNO3 as nitrogen source. Accordingly, NO2 concentration reached 10.4 μM after 95 h at the low CO2 condition (aerated with air); while the maximum NO2 concentration was only around 2.0 μM at the high CO2 condition (aerated with 5% CO2 in air), furthermore, after 30 h it decreased to no more than 1.0 μM. NO2 was almost assimilated in 80 h when C. muelleri was cultured at the high CO2 condition with 100 μM NaNO2 as sole nitrogen source. At the high CO2 condition, after 3 h the activity of nitrite reductase was as much as 50% higher than that at the low CO2 condition. It was indicated that enriched CO2 concentration could inhibit nitrite excretion and enhance nitrite assimilation by cells. Therefore, aeration with enriched CO2 might be an effective way to control nitrite content in aquaculture systems.  相似文献   

5.
In Ankistrodesmus braunii, in the absence of CO2, i.e. in CO2-free air or N2, photosynthetic nitrate uptake and nitrate reduction were inhibited, especially at low pH. Under such conditions, glucose stimulated nitrate uptake and reduction to almost the same level in the pH range between 6 and 8.5. CO2 at 0.03% effected an intermediate pH dependence of nitrate uptake; saturating CO2 concentration (more than 1%) eliminated the pH dependence, as did glucose, but the rates were enhanced compared with glucose. Glucose and, even more, CO2, drastically reduced the release of nitrite and ammonia to the medium, the stoichiometry between alkalinization of the medium and nitrate uptake (OH/NO3) approached 1.  相似文献   

6.
Protoplasts were isolated from the leaves of nitrate-cultured wheat (Triticum aestivum L. var. Frederick) seedlings. When incubated in the dark, protoplasts accumulated nitrite under anaerobic, but not under aerobic, conditions. The assimilation of [15N]nitrite by protoplasts was strictly light-dependent, and no loss of nitrite from the assay medium was observed under dark aerobic conditions. Therefore, the absence of nitrite accumulation under dark aerobic conditions was the result of an O2 inhibition of nitrate reduction and not a stimulation of nitrite reduction. In the presence of antimycin A, protoplasts accumulated nitrite under dark aerobic conditions. The oxygen inhibition of nitrate reduction was apparently due to a competition between nitrate reduction and dark respiration for cytoplasmic-reducing equivalents.  相似文献   

7.
Blue light was shown to regulate the utilization of oxidized nitrogen sources by green algae, both by activating nitrate reductase and promoting nitrite reductase biosysnthesis (MA Quiñones, PJ Aparicio [1990] Inorganic Nitrogen in Plants and Microorganisms, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, pp 171-177; MA Quiñones, PJ Aparicio [1990] Photochem Photobiol 51: 681-692). The data reported herein show that, when cells of Monoraphidium braunii at pH 8, containing both active nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase, were sparged with CO2-free air and irradiated with strong background red light, they took up oxidized nitrogen sources only when PAR comprised blue light. The activation of the transport system(s) of either both nitrate and nitrite was very quick and elicited by low irradiance blue light. In fact, blue light appears to act as a switch signal from the environment, since the uptake of these anions immediately ceased when this radiation was turned off. The requirement of blue light for nitrate uptake was independent of the availability of CO2 to cells. However, cells under high CO2 tensions, although they showed an absolute blue light requirement to initially establish the uptake of nitrite, as they gained carbon skeletons to allocate ammonia, gradually increased their nitrite uptake rates in the subsequent red light intervals. Under CO2-free atmosphere, cells irradiated with strong background red light of 660 nanometers only evolved oxygen when they were additionally irradiated with low irradiance blue light and either nitrate or nitrite was present in the media to provide electron acceptors for the photosynthetic reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Summary In green plant cells nitrite is reduced by two systems, one dependent on photosynthesis and the other upon respiration. Using a polarographic method for continuous measurement of nitrite uptake, the relationship between light driven and respiration linked nitrite reduction of Chlorella cells was studied.Photosynthetic nitrite reduction is characterized by a pronounced increase in the velocity of nitrite uptake upon illumination. After the light is turned off the velocity immediately returns to the preillumination value. Photosynthetic nitrite reduction of Chlorella is separated from respiration linked nitrite reduction by illumination with red light under anaerobic conditions; it is stimulated by CO2 and is inhibited by DCMU, findings which confirm earlier observations.In white light a special blue light stimulation of nitrite uptake is overlapped by photosynthetic nitrite reduction. In contrast to photosynthetic nitrite reduction this type of light stimulation is characterized by a lag period of about I min from the onset of illumination; it continues about 10 min when the light is turned off. It is separated from photosynthetic nitrite reduction by irradiation of the algae with low intensities of short wavelength light (<500 nm). Blue light stimulation of nitrite uptake of Chlorella is strongly dependent on the developmental stage of the cells. It is observed with young cells (autospores) of synchronized algae only.There is no evidence for any connection between blue light stimulation of nitrite uptake and photosynthesis. From the sensitivity of this process towards anaerobic conditions and antimycin A it is concluded to be a stimulation of respiration linked nitrite reduction.Under conditions of low exogenous nitrite concentration a temporary inhibition of steady state dark nitrite reduction appears immediately after the light is turned off. From several observations it is concluded that the inhibition already exists during the preceding illumination and decreases the rate of total nitrite uptake in the light. This process is suppressed by inhibition of respiration as well as by the inhibitor of photosynthesis, DCMU.If nitrate is the source of nitrogen an excretion of nitrite is found following illumination. The kinetics of this process agree with those observed for the light induced inhibition of steady state dark nitrite reduction immediately after illumination.  相似文献   

9.
Riens B  Heldt HW 《Plant physiology》1992,98(2):573-577
In leaves of spinach plants (Spinacia oleracea L.) performing CO2 and NO3 assimilation, at the time of sudden darkening, which eliminates photosystem I-dependent nitrite reduction, only a minor temporary increase of the leaf nitrite content is observed. Because nitrate reduction does not depend on redox equivalents generated by photosystem I activity, a continuation of nitrate reduction after darkening would result in a large accumulation of nitrite in the leaves within a very short time, which is not observed. Measurements of the extractable nitrate reductase activity from spinach leaves assayed under standard conditions showed that in these leaves the nitrate reductase activity decreased during darkening to 15% of the control value with a half-time of only 2 minutes. Apparently, in these leaves nitrate reductase is very rapidly inactivated at sudden darkness avoiding an accumulation of the toxic nitrite in the cells.  相似文献   

10.
The photosynthetic nature of the initial stages of nitrate assimilation, namely, uptake and reduction of nitrate, has been investigated in cells of the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans treated with l-methionine dl-sulfoximine to prevent further assimilation of the ammonium resulting from nitrate reduction. The light-driven utilization of nitrate or nitrite by these cells results in ammonium release and is associated with concomitant oxygen evolution. Stoichiometry values of about 2 mol oxygen evolved per mol nitrate reduced to ammonium and 1.5 mol oxygen per mol nitrite have been determined in the presence of CO2, as well as in its absence, with nitrate or nitrite as the only Hill reagent. This indicates that in A. nidulans water photolysis directly provides, without the need for carbon metabolites, the reducing power required for the in vivo reduction of nitrate and nitrite to ammonium, processes which are besides strongly inhibited when the operation of the photosynthetic noncyclic electron flow is blocked. Evidence indicating the participation of concentrative transport system(s) in the uptake of nitrate and nitrite by A. nidulans is also presented. The operation of these energy-requiring systems seems to account for the sensitivity to ATP-synthesis inhibitors exhibited by nitrate and nitrite utilization in l-methionine dl-sulfoximine-treated cells. The utilization of nitrate by A. nidulans cells, concomitant with oxygen evolution, can therefore be considered as a genuinely CO2-independent photosynthetic process that makes direct use of photosynthetically generated assimilatory power.  相似文献   

11.
Two green algal species, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Scenedesmus obliquus, exhibited a relative maximum during the decay of luminescence, when adapted to low CO2 conditions that was not observed in high CO2 adapted cells.From the kinetics of transient changes in the level of dark fluorescence, after illumination and parallel to the luminescence maxima, it was concluded that the maximum in Scenedesmus was mainly related to a decrease in nonphotochemical quenching, whereas in Chlamydomonas the maximum was mainly related to a dark reduction of the primary PS II acceptor QA.ATP/ADP ratios from low CO2 adapted Scenedesmus showed transient high levels after a dark/light transition that was not observed in high CO2 adapted cells. After 30 s of illumination the ATP/ADP ratios however stabilized at the same steady state level as in high CO2 adapted cells.Dark addition of HCO3 - to low CO2 adapted cells of Chlamydomonas resulted in a rapid transient quenching of luminescence that was not observed in low CO2 adapted cells of neither species.It is concluded that the luminescence maxima present in both low CO2 adapted Scenedesmus and Chlamydomonas reflect adaptation of the cells to low CO2 conditions. It is further suggested that the difference in mechanistic origin of luminescence maxima in the two species reflects differences in adaptation.Abbreviations ADP adenosine-diphosphate - ATP adenosine-triphosphate - Ci inorganic carbon - FD dark fluorescence recorded under dark adapted conditions - F0 fluorescence with all reaction centers open - FV variable fluorescence - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II - QA the first quinone acceptor of PS II  相似文献   

12.
One issue for the origin of life under a non-reducing atmosphere is the availability of the reduced nitrogen necessary for amino acids, nucleic acids, etc. One possible source of this nitrogen is the formation of ammonia from the reduction of nitrates and nitrites produced by the shock heating of the atmosphere and subsequent chemistry. Ferrous ions will reduce these species to ammonium, but not under acidic conditions. We wish to report results on the reduction of nitrite and nitrate by another source of iron (II), ferrous sulfide, FeS. FeS reduces nitrite to ammonia at lower pHs than the corresponding reduction by aqueous Fe+ 2. The reduction follows a first order decay, in nitrite concentration, with a half-life of about 150 min (room temperature, CO2, pH 6.25). The highest product yield of ammonia measured was 53%. Under CO2, the product yield decreases from pH 5.0 to pH 6.9. The increasing concentration of bicarbonate, at higher pH, interferes with the reaction. Comparing experiments under N2 CO2 shows the interference of bicarbonate. The reaction proceeds well in the presence of such species as chloride, sulfate, and phosphate, though the yield drops significantly with phosphate. FeS also reduces nitrate and, unlike with Fe+ 2, the reduction shows more reproducibility. Again, the product yield decreases with increasing pH, from 7% at pH 4.7 to 0% at pH 6.9. It appears that nitrate is much more sensitive to the presence of added species, perhaps not competing as well for binding sites on the FeS surface. This may be the cause of the lack of reproducibility of nitrate reduction by Fe+ 2 (which also can be sensitive to binding by certain species)  相似文献   

13.
Nitrogen-limited chemostat cultures of Chlorella fusca var. vacuolata, when given nitrogen in the inorganic forms of nitrate, nitrite and ammonium divert photo-generated electrons, from CO2 fixation to nitrogen assimilation. Addition of nitrate or nitrite, but not ammonium, stimulates rate of oxygen evolution. All but the most severely nitrogen-deficient culture have increased dark respiration rates after addition of inorganic nitrogen. The nitrite reduction step of nitrogen assimilation is the most light-dependent reaction.Abbreviation DCMU 3-(3, 4-dichloro)-1-1-dimethyl urea - CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone  相似文献   

14.
Hydrogenase mediated nitrite reduction in chlorella   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Stiller M 《Plant physiology》1966,41(2):348-352
The assay of the hydrogenase of glucose-grown cells of Chlorella pyrenoidosa, strain 7-11-05 by means of nitrite reduction with molecular hydrogen is described. The hydrogenase of Chlorella shows maximum activity immediately after equilibration in the hydrogen atmosphere. The hydrogenase mediated reduction of nitrite to ammonia requires the presence of CO2. However, at pH 6.4. when the reaction proceeds optimally, there is apparently sufficient retention of metabolic CO2 to support the reaction, which goes to completion, at near maximum rates.

Reduction of nitrite in the hydrogenase system when CO2 is present results in the uptake of 3 moles of H2 per mole of nitrite and ammonia is the product. When CO2 is absent or limiting, ammonia is also formed from nitrite but with the uptake of less than the stoichiometric amount of H2. It is concluded that CO2 is essential for the uptake of H2, and that in the absence of CO2 internal hydrogen donors support nitrite reduction.

The possibility that CO2 exerts a catalytic effect in all reductions mediated by hydrogenase in algae is considered, and a further hypothesis, that hydrogenase arises from that portion of the photosynthetic machinery which also shows a catalytic requirement for CO2, is proposed.

  相似文献   

15.
The assimilation of nitrate and nitrite under dark and lightconditions in Zea mays L. leaves was investigated. Nitrate wasassimilated under dark-aerobic conditions. Anaerobiosis stimulatednitrate reduction and nitrite accumulation under dark conditions.Vacuum infiltration of inhibitors of respiratory electron transport,antimycin A and rotenone, stimulated nitrate reduction and nitriteaccumulation under dark-aerobic conditions. Vacuum infiltrationof low concentrations of PCP, DNP and mCCCP depressed nitratereduction and nitrite accumulation under dark-aerobic conditions,whereas, infiltration of higher concentrations stimulated nitratereduction and nitrite accumulation. The greatest level of nitrateand nitrite reduction occurred under light conditions. The inhibitorof photosynthetic electron transport, DCMU, stimulated the accumulationof nitrite in the light, but decreased nitrate reduction. Whenthe inhibitors of respiratory electron transport antimycin Aand rotenone, were supplied together with DCMU in the light,nitrite accumulation was enhanced. Low concentrations of mCCCPdecreased both nitrate reduction and nitrite accumulation underlight conditions when supplied with DCMU. Key words: Nitrate reduction, Nitrite accumulation, Leaves  相似文献   

16.
The oxidation of NADH by mitochondrial respiration is inhibited by increased adenylate charge produced by photophosphorylation and under these conditions the reducing equivalents are used for nitrate reduction in the cytoplasm. Thus nitrate appears to function as an alternative electron acceptor to O2 for NADH generated by the citric acid cycle dehydrogenases. This mechanism ensures that nitrate assimilation occurs only in light and thus the accumulation of toxic levels of nitrite in the dark is avoided.  相似文献   

17.
Adenylate concentrations were measured in intact chloroplasts under a variety of conditions. Energy charge was significant in the dark and increased in the light, but remained far below values expected from observed phosphorylation potentials in broken chloroplasts, which were 80 000 M?1 or more in the light. With nitrite as electron acceptor, phosphorylation potentials in intact chloroplasts were about 80 M?1 in the dark and only 300 M?1 in the light. Similar phosphorylation potentials were observed, when oxaloacetate, phosphoglycerate or bicarbonate were used as substrates. ΔGATP was ?42 kJ/mol in darkened intact chloroplasts, ?46 kJ/mol in illuminated intact chloroplasts and ?60 kJ/mol in illuminated broken chloroplasts. Uncoupling by NH4Cl, which stimulated electron transport to nitrite or oxaloacetate and decreased the proton gradient, failed to decrease the phosphorylation potential of intact chloroplasts. Also, it did not increase the quantum requirement of CO2 reduction. It is concluded that the proton motive force as conventionally measured and phosphorylation potentials are far from equilibrium in intact chloroplasts. The insensitivity of CO2 reduction and of the phosphorylation potential to a decrease in the proton motive force suggests that intact chloroplasts are over-energized even under low intensity illumination. However, such a conclusion is at variance with available data on the magnitude of the proton motive force.  相似文献   

18.
Rhizobium hedysari strain HCNT 1 rapidly reduced nitrite to N2O, only slowly reduced nitrate to nitrite and did not exhibit nitrous oxide reductase activity. Nitrite reduction in this rhizobium strain may be a detoxification mechanism for conversion of nitrite, which inhibits O2 uptake, to non-toxic N2O. Concentrations of nitrite as small as 3 M diminished O2 uptake in whole cells. The bacterium did not couple energy conservation with nitrate or nitrite reduction. Cells neither grew anaerobically at the expense of these nitrogen oxides nor translocated protons during reduction of nitrite. Induction of nitrite reductase activity was not a response to the presence of nitrate or nitrite, but occurred instead when the O2 concentration in culture atmospheres fell to <16.5% of air saturation. Sensitivity of cytochrome o, which is synthesized only in cells grown under O2-limited conditions, may account for the toxicity of nitrite in strain HCNT 1.  相似文献   

19.
Chung J  Bae W 《Biodegradation》2002,13(3):163-170
Dissimilative reduction of nitrite by nitrite-acclimated cellswas investigated in a batch reactor under various environmental conditions that can beencountered in shortcut biological nitrogen removal (SBNR: ammonia to nitrite andnitrite to nitrogen gas). The maximum specific nitrite reduction rate was as much as 4.3 times faster than the rate of nitrate reduction when individually tested, but the reaction was inhibited in the presence of nitrate when the initial nitrate concentration was greater than approximately 25 mg-N/l or the initialNO 3 - N/NO 2 - N ratio was larger than 0.5. Nitrite reduction was also inhibited by nitrite itself when theconcentration was higher than that to which the cells had been acclimated. Therefore, it was desirable to avoid excessively high nitrite and nitrate concentrations in a denitrification reactor. Nitrite reduction, however, was not affected by an alkaline pH (in the range of 7–9) or a high concentration of FA (in the range of 16–39 mg/l), which can be common in SBNR processes. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) requirement for nitrite reduction was approximately 22–38% lower than that for nitrate reduction, demonstrating that the SBNR process can be economical. The specific consumption,measured as the ratio of COD consumed to nitrogen removed, was affected by the availability of COD and the physiological state of the cells. The ratio increased when the cells grew rapidly and were storing carbon and electrons.  相似文献   

20.
《Plant Science Letters》1984,33(1):31-38
Under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions exogenously supplied nitrite was utilized by sterile excised Zea mays L. root. A slightly greater quantity of nitrite was used under aerobic conditions than under anaerobiosis. The uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation, pentachlorophenol (PCP), diminished the utilization of nitrite under aerobic and anaerobic conditions resulting in a net accumulation of nitrite rather than a net disappearance of nitrite. Nitrite supplied together with nitrite resulted in a slight reduction in the level of nitrite utilized. Supply of exogenous nitrite had no effect on nitrate reduction under aerobic or anaerobic conditions. A net accumulation of nitrite occurs only when roots are supplied with nitrate in the absence of added nitrite. However, the level of nitrite accumulated under anaerobiosis, when roots were supplied with nitrate only, was found to be a fraction of the quantity of nitrite utilized when roots were supplied with nitrite under anaerobiosis. Nitrate utilization far exceeded the level of nitrite accumulated under anaerobiosis when roots were supplied with nitrate only.  相似文献   

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