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Nitrate Uptake by Roots as Regulated by Nitrate Reduction Products of the Shoot
334
Citations
6
References
1971
Year
BiologyBiogeochemistryEngineeringNitrate UptakeBotanyNitrate ReductionEnvironmental EngineeringNatural SciencesKno 3Root SystemNutrient CycleRoot MorphologyNitrate Reduction ProductsPlant PhysiologyRoot-soil Interaction
Abstract A mechanism is proposed by which secondary products of nitrate reduction in the shoot control the uptake of nitrate by the roots. KNO 3 enters the roots and is translocated to the shoot where nitrate is reduced and, at the same time, malate is produced. The reduction of nitrate is stoichiometric to the synthesis of malate (1). Part of the K‐malate moves down to the root system in which malate is oxidized, yielding KHCO 3 which exchanges for KNO 3 . Nitrate reduction in the shoot promotes the synthesis of malate which, after its translocation to the root, allows the preferential uptake of nitrate. Thus, plants reducing large amounts of nitrate may take up the anion without a superfluous accumulation of the cation. Furthermore, the utilization of nitrate by the shoot regulates its uptake by the root.
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