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1.
Anne Botrel  Werner M. Kaiser 《Planta》1997,201(4):496-501
The NADH-dependent nitrate reductase (NR, EC 1.6.6.1) in roots of hydroponically grown barley seedlings was extracted, desalted and the activity measured in buffer containing either Mg2+ (10 mM) or EDTA (5 mM). The former gives the actual NR activity (NRact) equivalent to dephospho-NR, whereas the latter gives the maximum NR capacity of the dephospho-form (NRmax). Both values together permit an estimation of the NR-phosphorylation state. Changes in NRact and NRmax were followed in response to root aeration or to shoot illumination or shoot removal, and were correlated with sugar contents and adenylate levels. Ethanol formation was also measured in roots differing in NR activity in order to obtain information on the relation between anaerobic alcoholic fermentation and nitrate reduction. In aerated roots, NR was highly phosphorylated (about 80%) and largely inactive. It was partly dephosphorylated (activated) by anoxia or by cellular acidification (pH 4.8 plus propionic acid). Anaerobic activation (dephosphorylation) of NR was stronger at acidic external pH (5) than at slightly alkaline pH (8), although ATP levels decreased and AMP levels increased at pH 5 and at pH 8 to the same extent. Thus, rapid changes in the NR-phosphorylation state in response to anaerobiosis were not directly triggered by the adenylate pool, but rather by cytosolic pH. Under prolonged darkness (24 h) or after shoot removal, NRmax decreased slowly without a large change in the phosphorylation state. This decrease of NRmax was correlated with a large decrease in the sugar content, and was prevented by glucose feeding, which had only minor effects on the phosphorylation state. Cycloheximide also prevented the decrease in NRmax without affecting the phosphorylation state. In contrast, anaerobiosis or cellular acidification prevented the decrease of NRmax and at the same time decreased the NR-phosphorylation state. It is suggested that NR turnover in roots is controlled by several factors: NR synthesis appears to depend on sugar availability, which has little effect on the phosphorylation state; in addition, NR degradation appears to be strongly affected by the phosphorylation state in such a way that the inactive phospho-NR is a better substrate for NR degradation than the dephospho-form. The rate of anaerobic ethanol formation was not affected by NR activity, indicating that the purpose of NR activation under hypoxia or anoxia is not to decrease or prevent alcoholic fermentation. Received: 29 August 1996 / Accepted: 8 November 1996  相似文献   

2.
Maize (Zea mays L.) grown on low (0.8 mM) NO 3 - , as well as untransformed and transformed Nicotiana plumbaginifolia constitutively expressing nitrate reductase (NR), was used to study the effects of NO 3 - on the NR activation state. The NR activation state was determined from the relationship of total activity extracted in the presence of ethylenediaminetetracetic acid to that extracted in the presence of Mg2+. Light activation was observed in both maize and tobacco leaves. In the tobacco lines, NO 3 - did not influence the NR activation state. In excised maize leaves, no correlation was found between the foliar NO 3 - content and the NR activation state. Similarly, the NR activation state did not respond to NO 3 - . Since the NR activation state determined from the degree of Mg2+-induced inhibition of NR activity is considered to reflect the phosphorylation state of the NR protein, the protein phosphatase inhibitor microcystin LR was used to test the importance of protein phosphorylation in the NO 3 - -induced changes in NR activity. In-vivo inhibition of endogenous protein phosphatase activity by microcystin-LR decreased the level of NR activation in the light. This occurred to the same extent in the presence or absence of exogenous NO 3 - . We conclude that NO 3 - does not effect the NR activation state, as modulated by protein phosphorylation in either tobacco (a C3 species) or maize (a C4 species). The short-term regulation of NR therefore differs from the NO 3 - -mediated responses observed for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and sucrose phosphate synthase.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - MC microcystin-LR - PEP-Case phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - SPS sucrose-phosphate synthase We are indebted to Madeleine Provot and Nathalie Hayes for excellent technical assistance. This work was funded by EEC Biotechnology Contract No. BI02 CT93 0400, project of technical priority, Network D — Nitrogen Utilisation and Efficiency.  相似文献   

3.
Circadian rhythmicity of nitrate reductase activity in barley leaves   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1) activity showed circadian rhythmicity in the first leaf of 8–11 days old barley ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Herta) plants. Circadian rhythms were found using both the in vitro and in vivo method for testing the enzyme activity. When the light intensity was reduced from 65 to 20 W m−2, the amplitude was smaller and the oscillations were damped sooner. In continuous darkness nitrate reductase activity decreased in a two step process. Three different light qualities were tested which all gave the same results.  相似文献   

4.
Latent nitrate reductase activity (NRA) was detected in corn (Zea mays L., Golden Jubilee) root microsome fractions. Microsome-associated NRA was stimulated up to 20-fold by Triton X-100 (octylphenoxy polyethoxyethanol) whereas soluble NRA was only increased up to 1.2-fold. Microsome-associated NRA represented up to 19% of the total root NRA. Analysis of microsomal fractions by aqueous two-phase partitioning showed that the membrane-associated NRA was localized in the second upper phase (U2). Analysis with marker enzymes indicated that the U2 fraction was plasma membrane (PM). The PM-associated NRA was not removed by washing vesicles with up to 1.0 M NACl but was solubilized from the PM with 0.05% Triton X-100. In contrast, vanadate-sensitive ATPase activity was not solubilized from the PM by treatment with 0.1% Triton X-100. The results show that a protein capable of reducing nitrate is embedded in the hydrophobic region of the PM of corn roots.Abbreviations L1 first lower phase - NR nitrate reductase - NRA nitrate-reductase activity - PM plasma membrane - T:p Triton X-100 (octylphenoxy polyethoxyethanol) to protein ratio - U2 second upper phase  相似文献   

5.
The effects of red and far-red light on the enhancement of in vitro nitrate reductase activity and on nitrate accumulation in etiolated excised maize leaves were examined. Illumination for 5 min with red light followed by a 4-h dark period caused a marked increase in nitrate reductase activity, whereas a 5-min illumination with far-red light had no effect on the enzyme activity. The effect of red light was completely reversed by a subsequent illumination with the same period of far-red light. Continuous far-red light also enhanced nitrate reductase activity. Both photoreversibility by red and far-red light and the operation of high intensity reaction under continuous far-red light indicated that the induction of nitrate reductase was mediated by phytochrome. Though nitrate accumulation was slightly enhanced by red and continuous far-red light treatments by 17% and 26% respectively, this is unlikely to account for the entire increase of nitrate reductase activity. The far-red light treatments given in water, to leaves preincubated in nitrate, enhanced nitrate reductase activity considerably over the dark control. The presence of a lag phase and inhibition of increase in enzyme activity under continuous far-red light-by tungstate and inhibitors of RNA synthesis and protein synthesis-rules out the possibility of activation of nitrate reductase and suggests de novo synthesis of the enzyme affected by phytochrome.  相似文献   

6.
The in vitro and various modifications of the in vivo assay for nitrate reductase have been compared in order to elucidate their usefulness in studies of diurnal variations of enzyme activity in barley leaves ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Herta). Generally, activity was low in the morning and increased rapidly during the first hours of the photoperiod. In the in vivo assay the leaf tissue was vacuum-infiltrated, whereafter either N2 was bubbled through the assay buffer (anaerobic assay), or no N2 was used (aerobic assay). Activity was 2–25 times higher in the anaerobic than in the aerobic assay. Anaerobiosis enhanced activity most during the dark period when the nitrate reductase level was low. Aerobic in vivo activity usually showed a more rapid decrease towards the end of the light period than did anaerobic activity. Addition of glucose and/or nitrate to the in vivo assay buffer usually stimulated activity more in the aerobic than in the anaerobic assay. In the morning, at the end of the dark period, these additives stimulated activity by 20–400% depending on growth and assay conditions. Later in the day stimulation was usually less, and even a slight inhibition was observed when only nitrate (0.1 M ) was added. The effect of these additives on the activity patterns determined was to dampen the oscillations. The additives were therefore not advantageous when testing diurnal variations. However, when the plants were grown under relatively poor light conditions it was necessary to add nitrate and glucose to the aerobic in vivo assay buffer since activity was otherwise too low to be measured. The in vitro assay gave about 5 times higher activity than the anaerobic in vivo assay. During the last part of the dark period in vivo activity (without glucose and KNO3 in the assay buffer) decreased while in vitro activity remained constant.  相似文献   

7.
The responses of nitrate reductase (NR) activity and levels of NR-mRNA to environmental nitrate and exogenous cytokinins are characterised in roots and shoots of barley ( Hordeum vulgare L., cv. Golf), using a chemostate-like culture system for controlling nitrate nutrition. Experiments were mainly performed with split root cultures where nitrate-N was supplied at a constant relative addition rate of 0.09 day−1, and distributed between the subroots in a ratio of 20%:80%. The subroot NR-mRNA level and NR activity, as well as the endogenous level of zeatin riboside (ZR), increased when the local nitrate supply to one of the subroots was increased 4-fold by reversing the nitrate addition ratio (i.e. from 20%:80% to 80%:20%). Also shoot levels of ZR, NR-mRNA and NR activity increased in response to this treatment, even though the total nitrate supply remained unaltered. External supply of ZR at 0.1 μ M caused an approximately 3-fold increase in root ZR levels within 6 h. which is comparable to the nitrate-induced increase in root ZR. External application of ZR. zeatin. isopentenyl adenine or isopentenyl adenosine at 0.1 μ M caused from insignificant to 25% increases in NR-mRNA and activity in roots and up to 100% stimulation in shoots, whereas adenine or adenosine had no effect. No synergistic effects of perturbed nitrate supply and cytokinin application were detected in either roots or shoots. The translocation of nitrate from the root to the shoot was unaffected by application of ZR or switching the nitrate distribution ratio between subroots. The data give arguments for a physiological role of cytokinins in the response of root and shoot NR to environmental nitrate availability. The nature and limitations of the physiological role of cytokinins are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Plasma-membrane-bound nitrate reductase (PM-NR) is located in roots and leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Samsun) and reduces nitrate with NADH as electron donor. When plasma membranes were prepared under specific protecting conditions, a PM-NR of roots was detected that accepts electrons from succinate to reduce nitrate. Comparison between the succinate dehydrogenase of mitochondria and the succinate-oxidising PM-NR of roots indicated that they are two different enzymes. Partial purification of the nitrate reductase forms by anion-exchange chromatography indicated that succinate and NADH supply electrons to the same plasma-membrane-bound protein. Received: 27 March 1997 / Accepted: 9 April 1997  相似文献   

10.
T. Borner  R. R. Mendel  J. Schiemann 《Planta》1986,169(2):202-207
The activities of nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1) are 60–70% of wild-type activity in pigment-deficient leaves of the chloroplast-ribosomedeficient mutants albostrians (Hordeum vulgare) and iojap (Zea mays). The activity and apoprotein of nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1.) are lacking in the barley mutant. Only very low activities of nitrate reductase can be extracted from leaves of the maize mutant. The molybdenum cofactor of nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.3.2) is present in maize and barley mutant plants. However, it is not inducible by nitrate in pigment-deficient leaves of albostrians. From these results we conclude: (i) Nitrite reductase (a chloroplast enzyme) is synthesized in the cytoplasm and does not need the presence of nitrate reductase for the induction and maintenance if its activity. (ii) The loss or low activity of nitrate reductase is a consequence of the inability of the mutants to accumulate the apoprotein of this enzyme. (iii) The chloroplasts influence the accumulation (i.e. most probably the synthesis) of the nonchloroplast enzyme, nitrate reductase. The accumulation of nitrate reductase needs a chloroplast factor which is not provided by mutant plastids blocked at an early stage of their development.Abbreviations CRM cross-reacting material - Mo-co molybdenum cofactor - NiR nitrite reductase - NR nitrate reductase  相似文献   

11.
Remobilisation of vacuolar stored nitrate in barley root cells   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Double-barrelled nitrate-selective microelectrodes have been used to measure the time course of the remobilisation of vacuolar stored nitrate in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Klaxon) root cells during 24 h of nitrate deprivation. These measurements showed that there are different time courses for this process in epidermal and cortical cells of the same root. The remobilisation was much slower from cortical cell vacuoles and had a time course which was similar to that obtained for tissue digests of the roots. The microelectrodes were also used to measure the nitrate concentration in sap exuding from detopped seedlings. These measurements showed that there was a gradual decrease in the delivery of nitrate to the shoot during this time. Root nitrate reductase activity of neither shoots nor roots changed significantly during the first 24 h. Direct measurement of the cytosolic nitrate in a root epidermal cell showed that during short-term changes, such as a 20-min exposure to zero external nitrate supply, cytosolic nitrate was maintained relatively unchanged. Net nitrate efflux from the roots was measurable during the initial 5 h of the zero-nitrate incubation period; after this time no further nitrate efflux was detectable. These measurements are discussed in relation to the nitrate budget of a root cell and we conclude that during the first 24 h of nitrate withdrawal vacuolar nitrate can be readily mobilised to supply the nitrogen demands of the seedling and to maintain the cytosolic nitrate concentration. Received: 31 July 1997 / Accepted 11 December 1997  相似文献   

12.
Nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) in spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. cv. Polka F1) leaves showed reversible modulation, being activated in the light and inactivated in the dark (t/2 = 20–30 min). The large changes in enzyme activity during light-dark transients were observed only when assayed in buffers containing free Mg2+. In the presence of EDTA (5 mM), the enzyme activity was high and the light modulation was barely evident.The inactivation of NR in the dark could be totally prevented by anaerobiosis, or by feeding mannose or 2,4-dinitrophenol through the leaf petiole. All these treatments drastically decreased ATP levels and increased AMP levels in leaf extracts, thus pointing to a close correlation between adenine-nucleotide levels and NR activity. Treatment of leaves in the dark with 2,4-dinitrophenol or with anaerobiosis brought about an accumulation of nitrite, thus confirming that under these conditions NR remained active also in vivo. The in-vivo dark-inactivated enzyme was reactivated in vitro by preincubating a leaf extract with AMP in the presence of the myokinase inhibitor p1,p5-di(adenosine 5)pentaphosphate. It is suggested that NR responds to artificially induced drastic changes in cytosolic adeninenucleotide levels, being active when ATP is low and AMP is high. Adenine nucleotides also appear to participate in the light-dark modulation of NR, but additional regulatory factors have to be postulated.  相似文献   

13.
Over a 24-h light-dark cycle, the level of mRNA coding for nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) in the leaves of nitrate-fed Nicotiana tabacum L. plants increased throughout the night and then decreased until it was undetectable during the day. The amount of NR protein and NR activity were two-fold higher during the day than at night. When plants were transferred to continuous light conditions for 32 h, similar variations in NR gene expression, as judged by the above three parameters, still took place in leaf tissues. On the other hand, when plants were transferred to continuous dark conditions for 32 h, the NR-mRNA level continued to display the rhythmic fluctuations, while the amount of NR protein and NR activity decreased constantly, becoming very low, and showed no rhythmic variations. After 56 h of continuous darkness, the levels of NR mRNA, protein and activity in leaves all became negligible, and light reinduced them rapidly. These results indicate the circadian rhythmicity and light dependence of NR expression.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Nitrate reductase activity (NRA) in different compartments of 14 Mediterranean geophytes (bulbous, tuberous and rhizomatous) and actual mineral nitrogen (NO3 and NH4+) in their soils were investigated. The nitrate reduction capacities of each species were determined as NRA per total plant material. Differences among compartments for NRA were significant in all species. The highest NRA was found in leaves of tuberous species (Anemone coronaria, Cyclamen coum) and of most bulbous species (Allium flavum, Allium guttatum, Bellevelia sarmatica, Galanthus plicatus, Leucojum aestivum, Ornithogalum nutans, Tulipa sylvestris). Therefore, in this group of species the contribution of the leaves to total plant NRA was the highest. The other bulbous species (Allium scorodoprasum, Crocus chrysanthus, Fritillaria bithynica, Muscari neglectum) and one rhizomatous taxon (Iris suaveolens) have a different NRA distribution within the plants. In these species the highest values of NRA were found in different organs. For example, in Allium scorodoprasum the highest NRA was in tunics, and in flowers in M. neglectum. Although leaves are the main compartments reducing nitrate in most of the studied geophytes, other compartments also contribute to total plant nitrate reduction.Our results show that the nitrate reduction capacity is different among geophyte species. Even if it roughly reflects the nitrogen supply in a habitat, differences in nitrate reduction capacities of different species collected from same sites indicate that the nitrate reducing capacity is species-specific.  相似文献   

17.
Ammonium sulfate (5 mM) had no effect on nitrate reductase activity during a 3 hr dark incubation, but the enzyme was increased 2.5-fold during a subsequent 24 hr incubation of the maize leaves in light. The enzyme activity induced by ammonium ion declined at a slower rate under non-inducing conditions than that induced by nitrate. The decline in ammonium stimulated enzyme activity in the dark was also slower than that with nitrate. Further. cycloheximide accelerated the dark inactivation of the ammonium-enzyme while it had no effect on the nitrate-enzyme. The experiments demonstrate that increase in nitrate reductase activity by ammonium ion is different from the action of nitrate action.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrate reductase (NR, NADH:nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.1) activity from leaves of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Hassan) is rapidly and reversibly inactivated during a light-dark transition. A hyperbolic correlation exists between in vivo rates of CO2 fixation and extractable NR activity from the leaves, and feeding hexose and hexosephosphate protects against the dark-inactivation; indicating that carbon-assimilation products are regulatory factors of NR activity mediating both the light-dark modulation and its dependence upon CO2 fixation. To corroborate this point, the effect of inhibiting CO2 fixation on NR activity in barley leaves has been analyzed. Glycolaldehyde (50 mM), an inhibitor of the regeneration phase of the Calvin cycle, was fed through the transpiration stream and inhibited CO2 fixation by more than 80% at the same time as it produced a parallel inhibition of NR light-activation. Feeding mannose (10 mM), inhibited CO2 fixation by 35% but did not affect NR activity in illuminated leaves and completely protected against dark-inactivation. Interestingly, feeding inorganic phosphate, Pi, (10 mM) alone or together with mannose also protected NR activity against dark-inactivation. The mannose effect could be interpreted in terms of accumulation of mannose 6-phosphate, an analog of glucose 6-phosphate. After feeding either 10 mM glucose or dihydroxyacetone phosphate, NR activity from darkened leaves was significantly higher than that of darkened control leaves fed with water (P< 0.03). These treatments, as well as Pi feeding, also produce some increase in extractable NR activity from illuminated leaves. The results indicate that factors increasing the levels of hexose- and triose-phosphate have positive effects on NR activation, supporting the contention that the NR activation system is sensitive to carbon-assimilation products.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Of the different hormones tested, cytokinins stimulated nitrate-induced nitrate reductase (NR) activity in the dark. The optimal stimulation was obtained at 16 hr and this was sensitive to tungstate, 6-methylpurine and cycloheximide. The cytokinin stimulation of NR activity was further enhanced by brief irradiation with red light, but this effect was not noticed when leaves were exposed to far-red light. Both kinetin and red light, when given together, or given with a darkness interruption, stimulated the NR activity more than with either of them alone.  相似文献   

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