Publication | Open Access
In Vivo Gas Exchange Measurement of the Site and Dynamics of Nitrate Reduction in Soybean
15
Citations
30
References
2003
Year
Soil GasBiogeochemistryPlant AnalysisEngineeringBioenergyBotanyNitrate ReductionEnvironmental EngineeringPhotorespirationAgricultural EconomicsGas Exchange ProcessCv Maple GlenGas Analysis SystemPhotosynthesisPlant PhysiologyWhole-plant NoPlant MetabolismHealth Sciences
A gas analysis system was built to study the relationship between the reductant cost of NO(3)(-) assimilation and the measured rate of CO(2) and O(2) exchange in roots, leaves, and stems+ petioles of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. cv Maple glen) plants. The measurements were used to calculate the diverted reductant utilization rate (DRUR = 4*[measured rate of CO(2) + measured rate of O(2)], in moles of high-energy electron [e(-)] per gram per hour) in plants in the presence (N+) and absence (N-) of NO(3)(-). The differences in DRUR between the N+ and N- treatments provided a measure of the NO(3)(-)-coupled DRUR of 25-d-old plants, whereas a (15)NO(3)(-)-enriched nutrient solution was used to obtain an independent measure of the rate of NO(3)(-) assimilation. The measured reductant cost for the whole plant was 9.6 e(-) per N assimilated, a value within the theoretical range of four to 10 e(-) per N assimilated. The results predicted that shoots accounted for about 55% of the whole-plant NO(3)(-) assimilation over the entire day, with shoots dominating in the light, and roots in the dark. The gas analysis approach described here holds promise as a powerful, noninvasive tool to study the regulation of NO(3)(-) assimilation in plant tissue.
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