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1.
2.
Levels of amide and ureide biogenic enzymes were compared in the plant cytosol fractions of root nodules from soybean ( Glycine max L. Merr., cv. Williams), pintobean ( Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Pinto) and Lupin ( Lupinus angustifolius L. cv. Frost). Enzymes of purine oxidation were found to be present in significant quantities only in ureide-transporting pintobean and soybean nodules. The levels of these enzymes were low in lupin, but this amide-exporter had significantly higher levels of asparagine synthetase. Enzymes of de novo purine biosynthesis and glycine biosynthesis were present at higher levels in pintobean and soybean, consistent with a role for de novo purine biosynthesis in ureide biogenesis. The low levels of these enzymes in lupin are consistent with a role in general purine and amino acid metabolism in these nodules, not directly related to the synthesis of transport compounds for fixed atmospheric nitrogen. Amino acid concentrations in soybean, pintobean and lupin nodules reflected the metabolic differences between amide and ureide plants. The comparative data presented are consistent with a pathway of ureide biogenesis using glutamine, glutamate and aspartate synthesized via reactions catalyzed by glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase and aspartate aminotransferase in the de novo synthesis of purines followed by oxidation of these purines to produce the ureides allantoin and allantoic acid.  相似文献   

3.
The ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid, are the major nitrogenous substances transported within the xylem of N2-fixing soybeans (Glycine max L. Merr. cv Amsoy 71). The ureides accumulated in the cotyledons, roots and shoots of soybean seedlings inoculated with Rhizobium or grown in the presence of 10 millimolar nitrate. The patterns of activity for uricase and allantoinase, enzymes involved in ureide synthesis, were positively correlated with the accumulation of ureides in the roots and cotyledons. Allopurinol and azaserine inhibited ureide production in 3-day-old cotyledons while no inhibition was observed in the roots. Incubation of 4-day-old seedlings with [14C]serine indicated that in the cotyledons ureides arose via de novo synthesis of purines. The source of ureides in both 3- and 4-day-old roots was probably the cotyledons. The inhibition of ureide accumulation by allopurinol but not azaserine in 8-day-old cotyledons suggested that ureides in these older cotyledons arose via nucleotide breakdown. Incubation of 8-day-old plants with [14C]serine suggested that the roots had acquired the capability to synthesize ureides via de novo synthesis of purines. These data indicate that both de novo purine synthesis and nucleotide breakdown are involved in the production of ureides in young soybean seedlings.  相似文献   

4.
The ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid, are major forms of N transported from nodules to shoots in soybeans (Merr.). Little is known about the occurrence, localization, or properties of the enzymes involved in the assimilation of ureides in shoot tissues. We have examined the capacity of the shoot tissues to assimilate allantoin via allantoinase (EC 3.5.2.5) during leaf and fruit development in nodulated soybeans. Specific activity of allantoinase in leaves peaked during pod formation and early seed filling. In developing fruits allantoinase activity in the seeds was 2 to 4 times that in the pods when expressed on a fresh weight or organ basis. In seeds, the embryos contained the highest specific allantoinase activity. Stems and petioles also had appreciable allantoinase activity. With development, peaks in the amounts of allantoic acid, but not allantoin, were measured in both leaves and fruits suggesting that the assimilation of allantoic acid may be a limiting factor in ureide assimilation. Highest amounts of ureides were measured in the pith and xylem of stem tissues and in developing pod walls.  相似文献   

5.
Schubert KR 《Plant physiology》1981,68(5):1115-1122
During the period examined from 12 to 63 days after planting, the ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid, were the predominant nitrogenous solutes in the xylem exudate of soybeans (Glycine max [L.]) growing solely on symbiotically fixed nitrogen, accounting for approximately 60% and greater than 95% of the total nitrogen in the xylem exudate before and after the onset of active nitrogen fixation, respectively. For plants between 18 and 49 days of age, the apparent rate of ureide export estimated from concentrations of ureides in xylem exudate collected over a period of one hour was closely related to the rate of nitrogen fixation estimated from measurements of C2H2 reduction by nodulated root systems. After this time, the apparent rate of ureide export per plant continued to increase, reaching a maximum value at day 63 of 12 micromoles per plant per hour, even though the rate of C2H2 reduction per plant declined approximately four-fold. The most probable pathway for the biosynthesis of ureides involves the catabolism of purines. The levels of phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PRPP) synthetase, which catalyzes the formation of the PRPP required for purine synthesis, increased in parallel with the rates of nitrogen fixation (C2H2) from day 18 reaching a maximum value of 13.9 micromoles per plant per hour at day 49, and then both activities declined rapidly. During the period of active nitrogen fixation the ratio of PRPP synthesis estimated from measurements of PRPP synthetase activity in cell-free extracts to the apparent rate of ureide export was between 1 and 2. The activities of the enzymes of purine catabolism, xanthine dehydrogenase, uricase, and allantoinase, increased in parallel with the increases in nodule mass and the export of ureides with maximum activities of 13, 119, and 79 micromoles per plant per hour, corresponding with apparent rates of ureide export in the range of 9.5 to 11.9 micromoles per plant per hour. These results demonstrate that there is a close association between nitrogen fixation, PRPP synthetase activity, and ureide export in soybeans and support the proposal that recently-fixed nitrogen is utilized in the de novo synthesis of purines which are subsequently catabolized to produce the ureides.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
8.
The ureides allantoin and allantoate are key molecules in the transport and storage of nitrogen in ureide legumes. In shoots and leaves from Phaseolus vulgaris plants using symbiotically fixed nitrogen as the sole nitrogen source, ureide levels were roughly equivalent to those of nitrate-supported plants during the whole vegetative stage, but they exhibited a sudden increase at the onset of flowering. This rise in the level of ureides, mainly in the form of allantoate, was accompanied by increases in allantoinase gene expression and enzyme activity, consistent with developmental regulation of ureide levels mainly through the tissue-specific induction of allantoate synthesis catalysed by allantoinase. Moreover, surprisingly high levels of ureides were also found in non-nodulated plants fertilized with nitrate, at both early and late developmental stages. The results suggest that remobilized N from lower leaves is probably involved in the sharp rise in ureides in shoots and leaves during early pod filling in N(2)-fixing plants and in the significant amounts of ureides observed in non-nodulated plants.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibition of N2 fixation under water deficits has been hypothesized to result from N feedback within the plant involving ureides and/or asparagine (Asn). This study was undertaken to investigate ureide and Asn accumulation in shoots and nodules in response to treatments inhibiting nodule activity (acetylene reduction assay, ARA) such as Asn, ureide, or polyethylene glycol application to the nutrient solution of plants, boric acid on leaves, and imposition of a water deficit. ARA inhibition and nodule concentration of Asn and ureide were correlated to the ureide treatment applied (3–15 m M applied in the nutrient solution). Supplying Asn (3–9 m M applied in the nutrient solution) also induced an increase in nodule Asn and ureide concentration, which was associated with ARA inhibition. Spraying boric acid on leaves also inhibited ARA in parallel to an increase in shoot ureide and nodule Asn concentration while nodule ureide remained unchanged. By contrast, polyethylene glycol (PEG) inhibited ARA in parallel to an increase in nodule Asn and ureide concentration while shoot ureide was unchanged. The decline in ARA in response to water deficit was associated with an increase in nodule ureide, Asn and aspartate (Asp), although the increases in Asn and Asp were less than for ureides. Altogether, the results of these experiments indicated that Asn cannot be the only compound involved in the feedback inhibition of ARA. Instead ureide and Asn are probably both involved, either directly by accumulation of products that fail to be exported, or by feedback from the shoot due to an N -compound supply that exceeds shoot requirements.  相似文献   

10.
Ureide Metabolism in Non-nodulated Phaseolus vulgaris L.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The distribution of ureide-N was studied throughout vegetativeand reproductive growth of non-nodulated Phaseolus vulgarisL. (bushbean) grown in nitrate nutrient solution. Largest increasesin ureide-N per plant were correlated with flowering and earlypod formation and with seed filling. Highest amounts of ureidesper organ were measured in stems and axillary trifoliates. Highestconcentrations (µmol ureide-N g–1 fr. wt.) weremeasured in young developing organs and stems. Seeds did notaccumulate ureides until the ureide content of pods had reacheda maximum. Results obtained using the inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, allopurinol,are consistent with the origin of ureides via purine degradationbut alternative pathways cannot be discounted. Leaves and stems were shown to have the ability to degrade allantoatevia an enzymic process.  相似文献   

11.
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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12.
13.
Nodulated legumes receive their nitrogen via nitrogen-fixing rhizobia, which exist in a symbiotic relationship with the root system. In tropical legumes like French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) or soybean (Glycine max), most of the fixed nitrogen is used for synthesis of the ureides allantoin and allantoic acid, the major long-distance transport forms of organic nitrogen in these species. The purpose of this investigation was to identify a ureide transporter that would allow us to further characterize the mechanisms regulating ureide partitioning in legume roots. A putative allantoin transporter (PvUPS1) was isolated from nodulated roots of French bean and was functionally characterized in an allantoin transport-deficient yeast mutant showing that PvUPS1 transports allantoin but also binds its precursors xanthine and uric acid. In beans, PvUPS1 was expressed throughout the plant body, with strongest expression in nodulated roots, source leaves, pods, and seed coats. In roots, PvUPS1 expression was dependent on the status of nodulation, with highest expression in nodules and roots of nodulated plants compared with non-nodulated roots supplied with ammonium nitrate or allantoin. In situ RNA hybridization localized PvUPS1 to the nodule endodermis and the endodermis and phloem of the nodule vasculature. These results strengthen our prediction that in bean nodules, PvUPS1 is involved in delivery of allantoin to the vascular bundle and loading into the nodule phloem.  相似文献   

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

15.
Nodulated winged bean [Psophocarpus tetragonolobus (L.) DC., cv. UPS 122] were grown under constant environmental conditions and supplied with mineral nutrient solution in which nitrogen was absent or was present as nitrate (12 mg N week-1 plant-1). Nitrate treatment dramatically promoted plant growth, increased fruit weight 1.6 fold, was necessary for tuberisation and enhanced nodulation. The in vitro accumulation of 14C into asparagine and aspartate components of excised nodules supplied with exogenous 14CO2 and [14C]-D-glucose was greater for nitrate-treated plants, whilst accumulation into ureides was reduced by nitrate treatment. Levels of amino acids in xylem sap were greater for plants supplied with a complete nutrient solution, than those grown without applied nitrate, particularly for asparagine, glutamine and proline. Xylem ureide levels were greater for plants grown in the absence of supplementary nitrate. Nitrogen accumulated in leaf, stem and petiole, and root nodule tissues for utilisation during fruit development; peak nitrogen levels and time of anthesis were retarded for plants grown without applied nitrate. The shoot ureide content increased during fruiting, coincident with decreases in the total nitrogen content, indicating that ureide pools are not utilised during the early reproductive phase. However ureide reserves, particularly allantoin, were utilised during the later stages of pod fill. Enzyme activity which metabolised asparagine was found throughout the plant and was identified as K+-dependent asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1) and an aminotransferase. Apart from temporal differences in developmental profiles of enzyme activity, the activity of these enzymes and of allantoinase (EC 3.5.2.5) in developing tissues were similar for both treatments. The main differences were greater asparaginase and asparagine:pyruvate aminotransferase activities in root tissues and fruit of nitrate-supplied plants; allantoinase activity in the primary roots of plants grown without nitrate decreased during development, whilst activity in developing tubers (nitrate-supplied plants) increased.  相似文献   

16.
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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17.
Ammonia assimilatory and ureide biogenic enzymes were measured in the cytosol fraction of pigeonpea nodules during the period 15–120 days after sowing. The activity of enzymes involved in the initial assimilation of ammonia, i.e. glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase, asparagine synthetase and aspartate aminotransferase, substantially increased activities during the period of plant growth and reached a maximum value around 105 days after sowing. These increases paralleled the increase in nodule mass, nitrogenase activity and ureide content in nodules. Though no regular pattern was obtained for their specific activities, yet these activities when expressed relative to the specific activity of nitrogenase were many fold higher at each stage of development. Similar increases were observed in the activities of enzymes associated with the formation of ureides from purines. In almost all cases, the activities were again maximum around 90–105 days after sowing. The specific activities of nucleotidase, nucleosidase, xanthine dehydrogenase, uricase and allantoinase, when expressed relative to the specific activity of nitrogenase at vegetative, flowering and podsetting stages were again many fold higher indicating the sufficiency of the levels of these enzymes for the biosynthesis of ureides. The data presented are consistent with the proposal that in ureide producing legumes, ammonia is initially assimilated into glutamine, aspartate, etc., which are metabolised for the denovo synthesis of purines. The purines are then utilised for the production of ureides by a group of enzymes investigated here  相似文献   

18.
A nodulin-35 (N-35) cDNA encoding nodule-specific uricase (EC 1.7.3.3.) was isolated from a Vigna aconitifolia (mothbean) root nodule cDNA library. Sequence analysis of Vigna uricase (VN-35) cDNA revealed 90% homology to that of soybean. The VN-35 cDNA was inserted in the antisense orientation downstream of the CaMV—35S promoter, and transgenic hairy roots were formed on Vigna plants using Agrobacterium rhizogenes . Infection with Bradyrhizobium (cowpea) gave rise to root nodules on transgenic hairy roots supported by the wild-type shoot. Expression of antisense VN-35 RNA was detected in transgenic nodules on individual roots using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The nodules expressing antisense VN-35 RNA were smaller in size and showed lower uricase activity than nodules formed on the hairy roots transformed with a binary vector containing β-glucuronidase (GUS) gene (used as control), and the plants exhibited nitrogen deficiency symptoms. Ultrastructural analysis and immunogold labeling with antibody against soybean N-35 revealed that the growth of peroxisomes was retarded in transgenic nodules expressing antisense VN-35 RNA. These data suggest that a reduction in ureide biosynthesis limits the availability of symbiotically reduced nitrogen to the plant. The nodules of tropical legumes appear to be specialized in nitrogen assimilation and are developmentally controlled to produce and transport ureides.  相似文献   

19.
The ability of two soybean (Glycine max L. [Merrill]) cultivars, 'Williams 82' and 'Maple Arrow', which were reported to use different ureide degradation pathways, to degrade the ureides allantoin and allantoate was investigated. Protein fractions and total leaf homogenates from the fourth trifoliate leaves of both cultivars were examined for the ability to evolve either (14)CO(2) or [(14)C]urea from (14)C-labelled ureides in the presence of various inhibitors. (14)CO(2) evolution from [2,7-(14)C]allantoate was catalysed by 25-50% saturated ammonium sulphate fractions of both cultivars. This activity was inhibited by acetohydroxamate (AHA), which has been used to inhibit plant ureases, but not by phenylphosphorodiamidate (PPD), a more specific urease inhibitor. Thus, in both cultivars, allantoate may be metabolized by allantoate amidohydrolase. This activity was sensitive to EDTA, consistent with previous reports demonstrating that allantoate amidohydrolase requires manganese for full activity. Total leaf homogenates of both cultivars evolved both (14)CO(2) and [(14)C]urea from [2,7-(14)C] (ureido carbon labelled) allantoin, not previously reported in either 'Williams 82' or in 'Maple Arrow'. In situ leaf degradation of (14)C-labelled allantoin confirmed that both urea and CO(2)/NH(3) are direct products of ureide degradation. Growth of plants in the presence of PPD under fixing and non-fixing conditions caused urea accumulation in both cultivars, but did not have a significant impact on total seed nitrogen. Urea levels were higher in N-fixing plants of both cultivars. Contrary to previous reports, no significant biochemical difference was found in the ability of these two cultivars to degrade ureides under the conditions used.  相似文献   

20.
The activities of nodular uricase and allantoinase, the compositionof bleeding sap N, estimated rates of xylary N translocationand ureide assimilation in shoot tissues were compared in acold-tolerant (194) and sensitive (Seafarer, SF) line of nodulatedPhaseolus vulgaris grown under three different temperature regimes.Uricase activity increased with increasing growth temperatureand was generally greater in nodules of 194 than in SF at anyparticularly temperature. Extractable allantoinase activity,on the other hand, was highest in nodules from plants grownat the coolest temperature (15/10 C day/night) and there waslittle or no difference in activity between the lines. There was little difference in sap composition between linesor amongst temperature treatments. Ureides contributed between80–91 percent of the total sap N in both lines grown at25/15 or 20/15 C with a slightly lower per cent (65–84)when grown at 15/10 C. Estimated rates of N translocation werehigher in 194 than SF at the coolest growth temperature. Increasesin rates of N translocation between successive harvests of eitherline were often correlated with increases in total N accumulationand also an accumulation of ureides in stems plus petioles butnot leaves. Generally leaves assimilated all of the ureidesinto other compounds at all growth temperatures. Nodules andshoots of either line did not accumulate ureides at 15/10 C.194 Accumulated greater amounts of ureides in stems and petiolesthan SF when grown at the two warmer temperatures. The resultsare discussed in relation to the ability of 194 to fix greateramounts of N than SF at suboptimal growth temperatures. Phaseolus vulgaris, common bean, uricase, allantoinase, sap composition, ureide assimilation, low temperature stress  相似文献   

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