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1.
In unicellular algae, ammonium can be assimilated into glutamate through the action of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) or into glutamine through the sequential activities of glutamine synthetase and glutamate 2-oxoglutarate amidotransferase (GS-GOGAT pathway). We have shown that the first radio-labeled product of assimilation of 13NH4+ (t1/2= 10 min) was glutamine in the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana (Hustedt). When GS-GOGAT was inhibited with methionine sulfoximine, the incorporation of radioactivity into both glutamine and glutamate was blocked, implying that the radio-labeled glutamate is formed from glutamine. Glutamine was also the first labeled product when the intracellular concentration of ammonium was elevated by preincubation with unlabeled ammonium. The results indicate that the GS-GOGAT pathway is the primary pathway for the assimilation of nitrogen in T. pseudonana.  相似文献   

2.
Elongation of seminal and lateral roots of rice seedlings was markedly inhibited by high ammonium levels in growth medium. However, high exogenous nitrate concentrations had little inhibitory effect on root growth. The objective of this study was to elucidate the relationship between inhibition of rice root growth induced by high ammonium conditions and ammonium assimilation in the seedlings. Activity of glutamine synthetase (GS) was kept at a low level in the seminal roots of the seedlings grown under high nitrate levels. In contrast, high ammonium levels significantly enhanced the GS activity in the roots, so that Gln abundantly accumulated in the shoots. These results indicate that ammonium assimilation may be activated in the seminal roots under high ammonium conditions. Application of methionine sulfoximine (MSO), an inhibitor of GS, relieved the repression of the seminal root elongation induced by high ammonium concentrations. However, the elongation of lateral roots remained inhibited even under the same condition. Furthermore, MSO drastically increased ammonium level and remarkably decreased Gln level in the shoots grown under high ammonium conditions. These results show that, for rice seedlings, an assimilatory product of ammonium, and not ammonium itself, may serve as an endogenous indicator of the nitrogen status involved in the inhibition of seminal root elongation induced by high levels of exogenous ammonium.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of NaCl on changes in ammonium level and enzyme activities of ammonium assimilation in roots growth of rice (Oryza sativa L.) seedlings were investigated. NaCl was effective in inhibiting root growth and stimulated the accumulation of ammonium in roots. Accumulation of ammonium in roots preceded inhibition of root growth caused by NaCl. Both effects caused by NaCl are reversible. Exogenous ammonium chloride and methionine sulfoximine (MSO), which caused ammonium accumulation in roots, inhibited root growth of rice seedlings. NaCl decreased glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase activities in roots, but increased glutamate dehydrogenase activity. The growth inhibition of roots by NaCl or MSO could be reversed by the addition of L-glutamic acid or L-glutamine. The current results suggest that disturbance of ammonium assimilation in roots may be involved in regulating root growth reduction caused by NaCl.Abbreviations GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - GS glutamine synthetase - MSO methionine sulfoximine  相似文献   

4.
The wide range of plant responses to ammonium nutrition can be used to study the way ammonium interferes with plant metabolism and to assess some characteristics related with ammonium tolerance by plants. In this work we investigated the hypothesis of plant tolerance to ammonium being related with the plants’ capacity to maintain high levels of inorganic nitrogen assimilation in the roots. Plants of several species (Spinacia oleracea L., Lycopersicon esculentum L., Lactuca sativa L., Pisum sativum L. and Lupinus albus L.) were grown in the presence of distinct concentrations (0.5, 1.5, 3 and 6 mM) of nitrate and ammonium. The relative contributions of the activity of the key enzymes glutamine synthetase (GS; under light and dark conditions) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were determined. The main plant organs of nitrogen assimilation (root or shoot) to plant tolerance to ammonium were assessed. The results show that only plants that are able to maintain high levels of GS activity in the dark (either in leaves or in roots) and high root GDH activities accumulate equal amounts of biomass independently of the nitrogen source available to the root medium and thus are ammonium tolerant. Plant species with high GS activities in the dark coincide with those displaying a high capacity for nitrogen metabolism in the roots. Therefore, the main location of nitrogen metabolism (shoots or roots) and the levels of GS activity in the dark are an important strategy for plant ammonium tolerance. The relative contribution of each of these parameters to species tolerance to ammonium is assessed. The efficient sequestration of ammonium in roots, presumably in the vacuoles, is considered as an additional mechanism contributing to plant tolerance to ammonium nutrition.  相似文献   

5.
Two pathways of ammonium assimilation are known in bacteria, one mediated by glutamate dehydrogenase, the other by glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. The activities of these three enzymes were measured in crude extracts from four Rhizobium meliloti wild-type strains, 2011, M15S, 444 and 12. All the strains had active glutamine synthetase and NADP-linked glutamate synthase. Assimilatory glutamate dehydrogenase activity was present in strains 2011, M15S, 444, but not in strain 12. Three glutamate synthase deficient mutants were isolated from strain 2011. They were unable to use 1 mM ammonium as a sole nitrogen source. However, increased ammonium concentration allowed these mutants to assimilate ammonium via glutamate dehydrogenase. It was found that the sole mode of ammonium assimilation in strain 12 is the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase route; whereas the two pathways are functional in strain 2011.Abbreviations GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase  相似文献   

6.
The enzymes of the assimilation pathways in cultures of S. hygroscopicus grown in the presence of various nitrogen sources were investigated. No assimilation activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) was observed. Activities of alanine dehydrogenase (ADH), GDH, glutamine: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (GOGAT) and glutamate synthetase (GS) were studied. High concentrations of ammonium and alanine induced ADH formation. The levels of GS remained low in media with NH4Cl. Various nitrogen sources had no impact on the activity of GOGAT which suggested the involvement of constitutive synthesis. ADH was likely to play an alternative role. Determination of the quantitative and qualitative composition of the free amino acids confirmed the involvement of the GS-GOGAT pathway in nitrogen assimilation. The concentration of ammonium ions in the media with one amino acid or in the presence of several amino acids lowered the antibiotic activity while in the media with alanine and the other nitrogen compounds it increased the antibiotic activity.  相似文献   

7.
Spinach (Spinacea oleracea L. “Correnta F1”) and pea (Pisum sativum L. “Macrocarpon”) plants were grown in a hydroponic culture with nitrate (5 mM), or ammonium (5 mM) as the nitrogen source. Dry matter accumulation declined dramatically in spinach plants fed with ammonium, whereas there was no change in pea plants when compared with nitrate-fed plants. Data obtained from δ15N, the organic nitrogen content, N-assimilation enzyme activity, glutamine synthetase (L-glutamate:ammonia-ligase; EC 6.3.1.2), glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate:NAD+-oxidoreductase; EC 1.4.1.2) and enzymes from the tricarboxylic acid cycle suggest that ammonium incorporation into organic nitrogen is localized in the roots in pea plants and in the shoots in spinach plants. Distribution of incorporated ammonium (in shoots and roots) may determine ammonium tolerance. Our results show that unlike in spinach plants, in pea plants, an ammonium-tolerant species, GDH enzyme plays an important role in ammonium detoxification by its incorporation into amino acids. Furthermore, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (phosphate:oxaloacetate-carboxy-lyase; EC 4.1.1.31) and pyruvate kinase (ATP:pyruvate-2-O-phosphotransferase; EC 2.7.1.40) activities reflect a major flow of carbon for ammonium assimilation through oxalacetate in pea plants and through pyruvate in spinach plants. The differences in the sensitivity to ammonium between the species are discussed in terms of differences in the site of ammonium assimilation as well as in the nitrogen assimilation ways.  相似文献   

8.
Ammonium assimilation enzymes from several strains of ectendo- and ectomycorrhizal fungi were assayed after three weeks culture on a buffered synthetic medium containing ammonium as sole nitrogen source. Activity of NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH, EC 1.4.1.4) of ectomycorrhizal strains was very low despite excellent mycelial growth. Only ectendomycorrhizal fungus MrgX isolated from roots of Pinus sylvestris showed high GDH activity. Similar results were obtained when the enzyme extracts were subjected to starch gel electrophoresis. Growth of the fungi, except ectendomycorrhizal MrgX, was arrested when inhibitors of glutamine synthetase (GS, EC 6.3.1.2) or glutamate synthase (GOGAT. EC 1.4.7.1) (methionine sulphoximine or albizine, respectively) were included in the culture medium. Glutamine synthetase activity was found in all fungi tested. The results suggest that the GS pathway for ammonium assimilation is potentially operative in ectomycorrhizal fungi and imply only a minor role for GDH in ammonium assimilation by the studied ectomycorrhizal symbionts of pine. Some physiological and ecological implications of these results are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The studies were performed on young triticale seedlings grown on a mineral medium containing 5 mM NO 3 as the nitrogen source, with the addition of 0.5 mM CdCl2. It was determined that cadmium ions accumulated mainly in the plant roots. Decreases in nitrate concentrations both in the roots and shoots of seedlings, as well as decreases in soluble protein contents with simultaneous increases in endopeptidase activity were also observed. Both in roots and shoots significant decreases in glutamic acid were noted. Toxic cadmium ion accumulation in seedlings significantly modified activity of primary nitrogen assimilating enzymes, i.e. glutamine synthetase (GS, EC 6.3.1.2) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH, EC 1.4.1.2). There was a significant decrease in GS activity both in roots and in shoots of the stressed plants, in comparison to plants grown without cadmium. In shoots of the control plants and plants subjected to stress two GS isoforms were discovered: cytoplasmatic (GS1) and chloroplastic (GS2). Substantial decreases in total glutamine synthetase activity in green parts of seedlings, occurring under stress conditions, result from dramatic decrease in GS2 activity (by 60 % in relation to the control plants); despite simultaneous increases in the cytoplasmatic isoform (GS1) activity by approx. 96 %. Cadmium ions accumulating in roots and shoots of seedlings not only increased GDH activity, but also modified its coenzymatic specificity.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In higher plants it is now generally considered that glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) plays only a small or negligible role in ammonia assimilation. To test this specific point, comparative studies of 15NH4+ assimilation were undertaken with a GDH1-null mutant of Zea mays and a related (but not strictly isogenic) GDH1-positive wild type from which this mutant was derived. The kinetics of 15NH4+ assimilation into free amino acids and total reduced nitrogen were monitored in both roots and shoots of 2-week-old seedlings supplied with 5 millimolar 99% (15NH4)2SO4 via the aerated root medium in hydroponic culture over a 24-h period. The GDH1-null mutant, with a 10- to 15-fold lower total root GDH activity in comparison to the wild type, was found to exhibit a 40 to 50% lower rate of 15NH4+ assimilation into total reduced nitrogen. Observed rates of root ammonium assimilation were 5.9 and 3.1 micromoles per hour per gram fresh weight for the wild type and mutant, respectively. The lower rate of 15NH4+ assimilation in the mutant was associated with lower rates of labeling of several free amino acids (including glutamate, glutamine-amino N, aspartate, asparagine-amino N, and alanine) in both roots and shoots of the mutant in comparison to the wild type. Qualitatively, these labeling kinetics appear consistent with a reduced flux of 15N via glutamate in the GDH1-null mutant. However, the responses of the two genotypes to the potent inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, methionine sulfoximine, and differences in morphology of the two genotypes (particularly a lower shoot:root ratio in the GDH1-null mutant) urge caution in concluding that GDH1 is solely responsible for these differences in ammonia assimilation rate.  相似文献   

12.
As a promising candidate for biodiesel production, the green alga Chlorella protothecoides can efficiently produce oleaginous biomass and the lipid biosynthesis is greatly influenced by the availability of nitrogen source and corresponding nitrogen assimilation pathways. Based on isotope‐assisted kinetic flux profiling (KFP), the fluxes through the nitrogen utilization pathway were quantitatively analyzed. We found that autotrophic C. protothecoides cells absorbed ammonium mainly through glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), and partially through glutamine synthetase (GS), which was the rate‐limiting enzyme of nitrogen assimilation process with rare metabolic activity of glutamine oxoglutarate aminotransferase (GOGAT, also known as glutamate synthase); whereas under heterotrophic conditions, the cells adapted to GS‐GOGAT cycle for nitrogen assimilation in which GS reaction rate was associated with GOGAT activity. The fact that C. protothecoides chooses the adenosine triphosphate‐free and less ammonium‐affinity GDH pathway, or alternatively the energy‐consuming GS‐GOGAT cycle with high ammonium affinity for nitrogen assimilation, highlights the metabolic adaptability of C. protothecoides exposed to altered nitrogen conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Recombinant strains altered in the ammonium assimilation pathways were constructed with the purpose of increasing NADPH availability. The NADPH-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase encoded by GDH1, which accounts for a major fraction of the NADPH consumption during growth on ammonium, was deleted, and alternative pathways for ammonium assimilation were overexpressed: GDH2 (NADH-consuming) or GLN1 and GLT1 (the GS-GOGAT system). The flux through the pentose phosphate pathway during aerobic growth on glucose decreased to about half that of the reference strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D, indicating a major redox alteration in the strains. The basic growth characteristics of the recombinant strains were not affected to a great extent, but the dilution rate at which the onset of aerobic fermentation occurred decreased, suggesting a relation between the onset of the Crabtree effect and the flux through the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway downstream of glucose 6-phosphate. No redox effect was observed in a strain containing a deletion of GLR1, encoding glutathione reductase, an enzyme that is NADPH-consuming.  相似文献   

14.
This study is concerned with the effects of storage conditions, planting shock and water availability at planting sites on nitrogen assimilation in Pinus radiata. Seedlings were stored for 1, 8 or 15 days at 4 or 10 °C with or without soil around the roots and afterwards planted in well-irrigated or dry soils. Our analysis of protein content and the activities of glutamine synthetase (GS; EC 6.3.1.2) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH; EC 1.4.1.2) showed that, as storage duration increased, there was a gradual reduction in soluble protein content and an inhibition of GS, whereas GDH activity increased. Thus there appears to be a close relationship between desiccation and changes in nitrogen assimilation. These effects were more pronounced in bare-root seedlings than in seedlings with soil around the roots, indicating that the rooting-plug medium provides protection against desiccation. Seedlings were susceptible to planting shock even under well-watered conditions. Drought enhanced the severity of planting shock and both protein content (80%) and GS activity (75%) were drastically reduced when water was withheld, whereas GDH activity increased by more than 170%. Thus, the decline in needle relative water content (RWC) appeared closely related to a decrease in protein content and GS activity, and on the other hand, to an increase in GDH. There was a remarkable recovery of these parameters after rewatering, depending however, on stock quality at the moment of planting.  相似文献   

15.
The plant growth, nitrogen absorption, and assimilation in watermelon (Citrullus lanatus [Thunb.] Mansf.) were investigated in self-grafted and grafted seedlings using the salt-tolerant bottle gourd rootstock Chaofeng Kangshengwang (Lagenaria siceraria Standl.) exposed to 100 mM NaCl for 3 d. The biomass and NO3 uptake rate were significantly increased by rootstock while these values were remarkably decreased by salt stress. However, compared with self-grafted plants, rootstock-grafted plants showed higher salt tolerance with higher biomass and NO3 uptake rate under salt stress. Salinity induced strong accumulation of nitrate, ammonium and protein contents and a significant decrease of nitrogen content and the activities of nitrate reductase (NR), nitrite reductase (NiR), glutamine synthetase (GS), and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) in leaves of self-grafted seedlings. In contrast, salt stress caused a remarkable decrease in nitrate content and the activities of GS and GOGAT, and a significant increase of ammonium, protein, and nitrogen contents and NR activity, in leaves of rootstock-grafted seedlings. Compared with that of self-grafted seedlings, the ammonium content in leaves of rootstock-grafted seedlings was much lower under salt stress. Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activity was notably enhanced in leaves of rootstock-grafted seedlings, whereas it was significantly inhibited in leaves of self-grafted seedlings, under salinity stress. Three GDH isozymes were isolated by native gel electrophoresis and their expressions were greatly enhanced in leaves of rootstock-grafted seedlings than those of self-grafted seedlings under both normal and salt-stress conditions. These results indicated that the salt tolerance of rootstock-grafted seedlings might (be enhanced) owing to the higher nitrogen absorption and the higher activities of enzymes for nitrogen assimilation induced by the rootstock. Furthermore, the detoxification of ammonium by GDH when the GS/GOGAT pathway was inhibited under salt stress might play an important role in the release of salt stress in rootstock-grafted seedlings.  相似文献   

16.
A greenhouse experiment was carried out aiming to study the effect of iron deficiency on nitrogen fixation and ammonium assimilation in common bean nodules. Host-plant and nodule growth, symbiotic nitrogen fixation, glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were analyzed in two common bean varieties subjected to iron deficiency. Results showed that host-plant and nodules growth, nitrogen fixation and GS activity decreased when under Fe-deficiency against an important increase of ammonium accumulation and GDH activity. Tolerant variety Flamingo is clearly less affected by iron deficiency than the sensitive one, Coco blanc. The allocation of iron to nodules and Fe use-efficiency for nodule growth and symbiotic nitrogen fixation were on the basis of the symbiotic performance of Flamingo under iron deprivation. Under Fe-deficiency, GDH take over GS the ammonium assimilation activity, particularly in the tolerant variety.  相似文献   

17.
Weissman , Gerard S. (Rutgers U., Camden, N. J.) Influence of ammonium and nitrate on the protein- and amino acids in shoots of wheat seedlings. Amer. Jour. Bot. 46(5): 339–346. 1959.—Total and protein nitrogen per shoot of wheat seedlings grown with endosperm attached increased at a steady rate during a 96-hr. growth period, and protein nitrogen, as a percentage of total nitrogen, remained constant at about 53%. Total and protein nitrogen concentration was greatest for 24-hr. shoots and declined as the shoots became older. Total and protein nitrogen were determined in 96-hr. shoots of seedlings grown with endosperm attached but also supplied with ammonium, nitrate, or both in the culture solution. Total nitrogen was greatest in shoots supplied with ammonium, but only 38% was in the form of protein. Maximum protein synthesis occurred in shoots grown in both ammonium and nitrate and protein nitrogen as a percentage of total nitrogen approximated that achieved in shoots lacking nitrogen in the culture solution. The protein amino acid composition of 48-, 72-, and 96-hr. shoots was very similar but differed from 24-hr. shoots which contained higher percentages of arginine and lysine and lower percentages of alanine and threonine. This may be correlated with the higher proportion of meristematic cells in 24-hr. shoots. The protein amino acids in shoots grown with ammonium resembled that of shoots lacking nitrogen in the culture solution, but nitrate shoot protein contained a higher percentage of arginine and a lower percentage of lysine. Nitrate may stimulate the formation of enzymes, possibly of a nitrate-reducing system, with high arginine- low lysine content. Free asparagine and glutamine were both at a maximum in ammonium shoots and at a minimum in nitrate shoots, but asparagine predominated in shoots supplied with ammonium while glutamine was greatest in nitrate shoots. Aspartic acid, asparagine, and glutamine appeared to have ammonia-storage functions, but glutamic acid appeared to be primarily concerned with protein synthesis. Amino acid accumulation was greatest in shoots supplied with both ammonium and nitrate. Protein synthesis in these appeared to be limited by inadequate concentrations of glutamic acid and proline. A hypothesis is proposed in explanation of the high glutamic acid concentration in shoots provided with ammonium and nitrate.  相似文献   

18.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and glutamine synthetase (GS)-glutamine 2-oxoglutarate-aminotransferase (GOGAT) represent the two main pathways of ammonium assimilation in Corynebacterium glutamicum. In this study, the ammonium assimilating fluxes in vivo in the wild-type ATCC 13032 strain and its GDH mutant were quantitated in continuous cultures. To do this, the incorporation of 15N label from [15N]ammonium in glutamate and glutamine was monitored with a time resolution of about 10 min with in vivo 15N nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) used in combination with a recently developed high-cell-density membrane-cyclone NMR bioreactor system. The data were used to tune a standard differential equation model of ammonium assimilation that comprised ammonia transmembrane diffusion, GDH, GS, GOGAT, and glutamine amidotransferases, as well as the anabolic incorporation of glutamate and glutamine into biomass. The results provided a detailed picture of the fluxes involved in ammonium assimilation in the two different C. glutamicum strains in vivo. In both strains, transmembrane equilibration of 100 mM [15N]ammonium took less than 2 min. In the wild type, an unexpectedly high fraction of 28% of the NH4+ was assimilated via the GS reaction in glutamine, while 72% were assimilated by the reversible GDH reaction via glutamate. GOGAT was inactive. The analysis identified glutamine as an important nitrogen donor in amidotransferase reactions. The experimentally determined amount of 28% of nitrogen assimilated via glutamine is close to a theoretical 21% calculated from the high peptidoglycan content of C. glutamicum. In the GDH mutant, glutamate was exclusively synthesized over the GS/GOGAT pathway. Its level was threefold reduced compared to the wild type.  相似文献   

19.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) tends to have a lower affinity for ammonium than glutamine synthetase (GS) in higher plants. Consequently, nitrogen is mostly assimilated as ammonium by the GS/glutamate synthase pathway which requires 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG) as carbon skeletons. In contrast, the NADP(H)-dependent GDH in fungi has a higher affinity for ammonium than that in higher plants and plays a more significant part in ammonium assimilation. We isolated an NADP(H)-GDH gene (PcGDH) from the fungus Pleurotus cystidiosus and heterologously expressed it in rice (Oryza sativa L.). Alterations in nitrogen assimilation, growth, metabolism, and grain yield were observed in the transgenic plants. An investigation of the kinetic properties of the purified recombinant protein demonstrated that the amination activity (7.05 ± 0.78 μmoL min?1 mg soluble protein?1) of PcGDH was higher than the deamination activity (3.36 ± 0.42 μmoL min?1 mg soluble protein?1) and that the K m value for ammonium (K m = 3.73 ± 0.23 mM) was lower than that for the glutamate (K m = 15.97 ± 0.31 mM), indicating that the PcGDH tends to interconvert 2-OG and glutamate. Examination of the activity of NADP(H)-GDH in control and transgenic lines demonstrated that NADP(H)-GDH activity in the transgenic lines was markedly higher than that in the control lines; in particular, the amination activity was significantly higher than the deamination activity in shoots of the transgenic lines. The results of the hydroponics experiment revealed that shoot and root length, fresh weight, chlorophyll content, nitrogen content, and amino acid levels (glutamate, glutamine, and total amino acids) were elevated in transgenic lines in comparison with those of the control line under different nitrogen conditions at seedling stage. The 1,000-grain weight and the panicle number in transgenic lines were considerably augmented in the field condition, yet the filled grain rate dropped slightly and there was no apparent change in the grain yield. The levels of glutelin and prolamine in the transgenic seeds were considerably higher than those in control seeds. In conclusion, these results demonstrate that heterologous expression of P. cystidiosus GDH (PcGDH) could improve nitrogen assimilation and growth in rice.  相似文献   

20.
Analysis of soil solution from forest sites dominated by Eucalyptus grandis and Eucalyptus maculata indicates that soluble forms of organic nitrogen (amino acids and protein) are present in concentrations similar to those of mineral nitrogen (nitrate and ammonium). Experiments were conducted to determine the extent to which mycorrhizal associations might broaden nitrogen source utilization in Eucalyptus seedlings to include organic nitrogen. In isolation, species of ectomycorrhizal fungi from northern Australia show varying abilities to utilize mineral and organic forms of nitrogen as sole sources. Pisolithus sp. displayed strongest growth on NH4+, glutamine and asparagine, but grew poorly on protein, while Amanita sp. grew well both on mineral sources and on a range of organic sources (e.g. arginine, asparagine, glutamine and protein). In sterile culture, non-mycorrhizal seedlings of Eucalyptus grandis and Eucalyptus maculata grew well on mineral sources of nitrogen, but showed no ability to grow on sources of organic nitrogen other than glutamine. In contrast, mycorrhizal seedlings grew well on a range of organic nitrogen sources. These observations indicate that mycorrhizal associations confer on species of Eucalyptus the ability to broaden their resource base substantially with respect to nitrogen. This ability to utilize organic nitrogen was not directly related to that of the fungal symbiont in isolation. Seedlings mycorrhizal with Pisolithus sp. were able to assimilate sources of nitrogen (in particular histidine and protein) on which the fungus in pure culture appeared to grow weakly. Experiments in which plants were fed 15N-labelled ammonium were undertaken in order to investigate the influence of mycorrhizal colonization on the pathway of nitrogen metabolism. In roots and shoots of all seedlings, 15N was incorporated into the amide group of glutamine, and label was also found in the amino groups of glutamine, glutamic acid, γ-aminobutyric acid and alanine. Mycorrhizal colonization appeared to have no effect on the assimilation pathway and metabolism of [15N]H4+; labelling data were consistent with the operation of the glutamate synthase cycle in plants infected with either Pisolithus sp. (which in isolation assimilates via the glutamate synthase cycle) or Elaphomyces sp. (which assimilates via glutamate dehydrogenase). It is likely that the control of carbon supply to the mycorrhizal fungus from the host may have a profound effect on both the assimilatory pathway and the range of nitrogen sources that can be utilized by the association.  相似文献   

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