DIURNAL REGULATION OF NO3- UPTAKE IN SOYBEAN PLANTS .4. DEPENDENCE ONCURRENT PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND SUGAR AVAILABILITY TO THE ROOTS

Citation
P. Delhon et al., DIURNAL REGULATION OF NO3- UPTAKE IN SOYBEAN PLANTS .4. DEPENDENCE ONCURRENT PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND SUGAR AVAILABILITY TO THE ROOTS, Journal of Experimental Botany, 47(300), 1996, pp. 893-900
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
ISSN journal
00220957
Volume
47
Issue
300
Year of publication
1996
Pages
893 - 900
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0957(1996)47:300<893:DRONUI>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The short-term dependence of NO3- uptake upon photosynthesis and sugar supply to the roots of soybean plants was investigated in a series of experiments where CO2 availability, light intensity or conduction of phloem sap to the roots were severely limited. Removal of CO2 from the atmosphere or girdling of the stem equally prevented the stimulation of NO3- uptake when plants were transferred from darkness to the light , The effect of these two treatments can be reversed by CO2 re-supply or by addition of 10 mM glucose in the nutrient solution, respectively . Glucose was also more effective in stimulating NO3- uptake by intact plants in darkness than in light. Collectively, these observations ar e interpreted as evidence that the diurnal changes in NO3- uptake are due to decreased phloem transport of photosynthates in darkness. Accor dingly, the magnitude of these changes was much dependent on starch ac cumulation in the leaves at the end of the photoperiod. Shading the pl ants lowered this accumulation, and resulted in an amplification of th e diurnal changes in NO3- uptake. These results are discussed in conne ction with the hypothesis that the carbon-dependent plasticity of the night/day ratio of NO3(-) uptake is an important feature of the co-ord ination of the acquisition of N and C by the plant.