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Original Articles

Response of ammonium assimilation enzymes to nitrogen form treatments in different plant speciesFootnote1

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Pages 175-185 | Published online: 21 Nov 2008
 

Abstract

This series of experiments studied N metabolism in tomato, rice and corn. Ammonium (NH4 +), as a sole source of N, reduced tomato and corn growth, but not rice growth. Tomato showed the most severe NH4 + toxicity. Ammonium assimilation enzyme activity differed greatly among the species. Rice had much higher glutamine synthetase (GS) activity than corn and tomato with NH4 + nutrition. GS activity was especially high in shoot tissue. Ammonium induced high activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) in roots of tomato but not in rice. GS activity in rice increased as the level of NH4 + increased; and it was higher in shoots than roots, indicating GS activity as a key factor in the detoxification and metabolism of NH4 + in green tissues of efficient plant species.

Notes

Research supported by a scholarship from CNPq ‐ BRAZIL.

Journal Paper No. 11,295. The Agricultural Experiment Station, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907

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