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Carbon accumulation in kernels of low‐nitrogen maize is not limited by carbon availability but by an imbalance of carbon and nitrogen assimilates
Author(s) -
Ning Peng,
Maw Michael J. W.,
Yang Lu,
Fritschi Felix B.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of plant nutrition and soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.644
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1522-2624
pISSN - 1436-8730
DOI - 10.1002/jpln.202000112
Subject(s) - nitrogen , amino acid , asparagine , starch , sugar , glutamine , carbon fibers , chemistry , yield (engineering) , agronomy , horticulture , zoology , biology , food science , biochemistry , mathematics , organic chemistry , materials science , composite number , metallurgy , algorithm
Abstract Background: Carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) assimilate availability and their ratios are crucial for maize grain production and N‐use efficiency. Aim: Our aim was to give a mechanistic understanding of yield formation regulated by assimilate C:N balance during both early ear development and rapid grain filling. Methods: Maize was grown under field conditions with 0, 200, and 300 kg N ha −1 (referred to as N0, N200, and N300, respectively). Ear growth, grain yield, and dynamics of total C and N accumulation in ear leaves, cobs, and developing kernels (apical and basal proportions separated from the longitudinally middle of ear) were investigated, as well as the non‐structural carbohydrates and free amino acids. Results: Compared to N‐sufficient plants, low‐N plants contained 16% to 70% less N and 8% to 50% less C in the developing kernels, causing 43% to 52% yield losses, which indicated that low‐N kernels received less amino acid per unit sugar from the maternal plants. This was supported by lower concentrations of the main N transport molecules (glutamine and asparagine) in ear leaves at silking and 21 days after silking (DAS) coupled with the larger amounts of C accumulated as starch under N deficient compared to adequate N supply. Nitrogen treatment did not influence the concentrations of total free amino acids and soluble protein in the cob, neither at silking nor 21 DAS, but it did influence cob free amino acid composition. Compared to the adequate N supply, low‐N plants contained 75% and 57% less glutamine and asparagine in apical kernels at silking, as well as 36% and 31% less in basal kernels. Free amino acid concentrations in both cob and kernels were less responsive to N treatments at 21 DAS than at silking, especially in the basal ear halves. Conclusion: Maize grain production under low‐N environment can be more attributed to the balance in assimilate composition, particularly the amino acid profile, than the C‐assimilate availability for ear growth and development.