| Literature DB >> 26706056 |
Izargi Vega-Mas1, Daniel Marino2, Joseba Sánchez-Zabala3, Carmen González-Murua4, Jose María Estavillo5, María Begoña González-Moro6.
Abstract
Ammonium (NH4(+)) toxicity typically occurs in plants exposed to high environmental NH4(+) concentration. NH4(+) assimilating capacity may act as a biochemical mechanism avoiding its toxic accumulation but requires a fine tuning between nitrogen assimilating enzymes and carbon anaplerotic routes. In this work, we hypothesized that extra C supply, exposing tomato plants cv. Agora Hybrid F1 to elevated atmospheric CO2, could improve photosynthetic process and thus ameliorate NH4(+) assimilation and tolerance. Plants were grown under nitrate (NO3(-)) or NH4(+) as N source (5-15mM), under two atmospheric CO2 levels, 400 and 800ppm. Growth and gas exchange parameters, (15)N isotopic signature, C and N metabolites and enzymatic activities were determined. Plants under 7.5mM N equally grew independently of the N source, while higher ammonium supply resulted toxic for growth. However, specific stomatal closure occurred in 7.5mM NH4(+)-fed plants under elevated CO2 improving water use efficiency (WUE) but compromising plant N status. Elevated CO2 annulled the induction of TCA anaplerotic enzymes observed at non-toxic NH4(+) nutrition under ambient CO2. Finally, CO2 enrichment benefited tomato growth under both nutritions, and although it did not alleviate tomato NH4(+) tolerance it did differentially regulate plant metabolism in N-source and -dose dependent manner.Entities:
Keywords: Ammonium tolerance; Elevated CO(2); Nitrate nutrition; Nitrogen assimilation; Solanum lycopersicum L.; TCA cycle
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26706056 DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2015.09.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Sci ISSN: 0168-9452 Impact factor: 4.729