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. 1992 Aug;99(4):1294–1301. doi: 10.1104/pp.99.4.1294

Root Respiration Associated with Ammonium and Nitrate Absorption and Assimilation by Barley 1

Arnold J Bloom 1,2, Scott S Sukrapanna 1,2, Robert L Warner 1,2
PMCID: PMC1080623  PMID: 16669035

Abstract

We examined nitrate assimilation and root gas fluxes in a wild-type barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Steptoe), a mutant (nar1a) deficient in NADH nitrate reductase, and a mutant (nar1a;nar7w) deficient in both NADH and NAD(P)H nitrate reductases. Estimates of in vivo nitrate assimilation from excised roots and whole plants indicated that the nar1a mutation influences assimilation only in the shoot and that exposure to NO3 induced shoot nitrate reduction more slowly than root nitrate reduction in all three genotypes. When plants that had been deprived of nitrogen for several days were exposed to ammonium, root carbon dioxide evolution and oxygen consumption increased markedly, but respiratory quotient—the ratio of carbon dioxide evolved to oxygen consumed—did not change. A shift from ammonium to nitrate nutrition stimulated root carbon dioxide evolution slightly and inhibited oxygen consumption in the wild type and nar1a mutant, but had negligible effects on root gas fluxes in the nar1a;nar7w mutant. These results indicate that, under NH4+ nutrition, 14% of root carbon catabolism is coupled to NH4+ absorption and assimilation and that, under NO3 nutrition, 5% of root carbon catabolism is coupled to NO3 absorption, 15% to NO3 assimilation, and 3% to NH4+ assimilation. The additional energy requirements of NO3 assimilation appear to diminish root mitochondrial electron transport. Thus, the energy requirements of NH4+ and NO3 absorption and assimilation constitute a significant portion of root respiration.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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