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. 1975 Jun;55(6):1102–1106. doi: 10.1104/pp.55.6.1102

Nitrate Uptake and Assimilation by Wheat Seedlings during Initial Exposure to Nitrate 1

Doyle A Ashley a,2, William A Jackson a, Richard J Volk a
PMCID: PMC541775  PMID: 16659219

Abstract

Nitrate uptake, reduction, and translocation were examined in intact, 14-day-old, nitrogen-depleted wheat (Triticum vulgare var. Knox) seedlings during a 9-hour exposure to 0.2 mm Ca (NO3)2. The nitrate uptake rate was low during the initial 3-hour period, increased during the 3- to 6-hour period, and then declined. By the 3rd hour, 14% of the absorbed nitrate had been reduced, and this increased to 36% by the 9th hour. Shoots accumulated reduced 15N more rapidly than roots and the ratio of reduced 15N to 15N-nitrate was higher in the shoots. A significant proportion of the total reduction occurred in the root system under these experimental conditions. Accumulation of 15N in ethanol-insoluble forms was evident in both roots and shoots by the 3rd hour and, after 4.5 hours, increased more rapidly in shoots than in roots.

An experiment in which a 3-hour exposure to 0.2 mm Ca (15NO3)2 was followed by a 12-hour exposure to 0.2 mm Ca (14NO3)2 revealed a half-time of depletion of root nitrate of about 2.5 hours. A large proportion of this depletion, however, was due to loss of 15N-nitrate to the ambient 14N-nitrate solution. The remaining pool of 15N-nitrate was only slowly available for reduction. Total 15N translocation to the shoot was relatively efficient during the first 3 hours after transfer to Ca (14NO3)2 but it essentially ceased after that time in spite of significant pools of 15N-nitrate and α-amino-15N remaining in the root tissue.

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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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