Assimilation of [15N]Nitrate and [15N]Nitrite in Leaves of Five Plant Species under Light and Dark Conditions
Author(s) -
Andrew J. Reed,
David T. Canvin,
Joseph H. Sherrard,
Richard H. Hageman
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.71.2.291
Subject(s) - nitrite , nitrate , nitrogen assimilation , ammonium , assimilation (phonology) , sunflower , chemistry , agronomy , anaerobic exercise , botany , biology , physiology , philosophy , linguistics , organic chemistry
Light dependency of nitrate and nitrite assimilation to reduced-N in leaves remains a controversial issue in the literature. With the objective of resolving this controversy, the light requirement for nitrate and nitrite assimilation was investigated in several plant species. Dark and light assimilation of [(15)N]nitrate and [(15)N]nitrite to ammonium and amino-N was determined with leaves of wheat, corn, soybean, sunflower, and tobacco. In dark aerobic conditions, assimilation of [(15)N]nitrate as a percentage of the light rate was 16 to 34% for wheat, 9 to 16% for tobacco, 26% for corn, 35 to 76% for soybean, and 55 to 63% for sunflower. In dark aerobic conditions, assimilation of [(15)N]nitrite as a percentage of the light rate was 11% for wheat, 7% for tobacco, 13% for corn, 28 to 36% for soybeans, and 12% for sunflower. It is concluded that variation among plant species in the light requirement for nitrate and nitrite assimilation explains some of the contradictory results in the literature, but additional explanations must be sought to fully resolve the controversy.In dark anaerobic conditions, the assimilation of [(15)N]nitrate to ammonium and amino-N in leaves of wheat, corn, and soybean was 43 to 58% of the dark aerobic rate while dark anaerobic assimilation of [(15)N]nitrite for the same species was 31 to 41% of the dark aerobic rate. In contrast, accumulation of nitrite in leaves of the same species in the dark was 2.5-to 20-fold higher under anaerobic than aerobic conditions. Therefore, dark assimilation of nitrite cannot alone account for the absence of nitrite accumulation in the in vivo nitrate reductase assay under aerobic conditions. Oxygen apparently inhibits nitrate reduction in the dark even in leaves of plant species that exhibit a relatively high dark rate of [(15)N]nitrite assimilation.
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