A short-term exposure of cucumber plants to rising atmospheric CO2 increases leaf carbohydrate content and enhances nitrate reductase expression and activity
B. Larios et al., A short-term exposure of cucumber plants to rising atmospheric CO2 increases leaf carbohydrate content and enhances nitrate reductase expression and activity, PLANTA, 212(2), 2001, pp. 305-312
Nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) is the first enzyme of the nitrate-assim
ilatory pathway and is regulated transcriptionally and post-translationally
by several metabolic and environmental signals. To investigate whether NR
is controlled by the rate of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in cucumber (C
ucumis sativus L.), intact plants were exposed, after the dark period, to l
ight under different atmospheric CO2 concentrations (100, 400 and 2,000 muL
L-1) for 2 h. The in-vivo rates of net CO2 assimilation correlated with at
mospheric CO2 concentrations. The CO2-fixation rate under 2,000 muL L-1 CO2
was 2.4- and 5.4-fold higher than under 400 and 100 muL L-1, respectively.
Stomatal conductances and transpiration rates were almost identical after
the 2-h light period under the various CO2 concentrations tested. Increasin
g atmospheric CO2 concentrations caused concomitant increases in the conten
ts of starch and soluble sugars in the leaves and a decrease in the nitrate
content. The activity and activation state of NR were both higher under el
evated CO2 than under low CO2. High CO2 also enhanced NR-gene expression in
the leaves. Sugars were supplied via roots to intact carbohydrate-starved
plants and NR mRNA levels were analysed after 7 h. Fructose markedly stimul
ated NR-gene transcription in both leaves and roots. It is concluded that,
in cucumber plants, the rate of CO2 assimilation controls the rate of nitra
te assimilation by modulation of NR expression and activity, and that sugar
s are presumably involved as regulatory metabolites.