M. Sagi et al., THE MO-HYDROXYLASES XANTHINE DEHYDROGENASE AND ALDEHYDE OXIDASE IN RYEGRASS AS AFFECTED BY NITROGEN AND SALINITY, PLANT SCI, 135(2), 1998, pp. 125-135
The influence of salinity and nitrogen source on xanthine dehydrogenas
e (XDH; EC 1.2.1.37) and aldehyde oxidase (AO; EC 1.2.3.1) was studied
in annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum cv. Westerwoldicum). The activ
ities of AO and XDH in the roots and shoots of ryegrass plants increas
ed with salinity and NH4+ concentration. The salinity-enhanced activit
ies of XDH and AO were more pronounced in the roots than in the shoots
. Roots of NH4+-grown plants had higher AO and XDH activities than pla
nts grown in NO3-. Immunoblotting revealed a higher level of AO protei
n in roots than in shoots. Root AO protein increased with salinity and
was the highest in roots of NH4+-grown plants. The assays of the moly
bdenum cofactor (MoCo) hydroxylases (XDH and AO) showed a similar resp
onse to salinity and nitrogen, and differed in molecular weight and su
bstrate specificity. The concentration of ureides (allantoic acid and
allantoin) increased with salinity and NH4+, especially in the roots.
The ureide contents of plants grown on NH4+ were higher than in plants
receiving NO3-. The increase in Mo-hydroxylases with salinity and NH4
+ may constitute part of the mechanisms of plant adaptation to stress
by (1) enhancing the activity of AO, which catalyzes the final step in
biosynthesis of phytohormones such as abscisic acid (ABA), and (2) in
creased XDH activity and the subsequent production of ureides allowing
transport of organic nitrogen compounds with a low C/N ratio. (C) 199
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