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Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants

BACKGROUND: In plants, nitrate (NO(3)(-)) nutrition gives rise to a natural N isotopic signature (δ(15)N), which correlates with the δ(15)N of the N source. However, little is known about the relationship between the δ(15)N of the N source and the (14)N/(15)N fractionation in plants under ammonium (...

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Autores principales: Ariz, Idoia, Cruz, Cristina, Moran, Jose F, González-Moro, María B, García-Olaverri, Carmen, González-Murua, Carmen, Martins-Loução, Maria A, Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3224212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21575190
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-11-83
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author Ariz, Idoia
Cruz, Cristina
Moran, Jose F
González-Moro, María B
García-Olaverri, Carmen
González-Murua, Carmen
Martins-Loução, Maria A
Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro M
author_facet Ariz, Idoia
Cruz, Cristina
Moran, Jose F
González-Moro, María B
García-Olaverri, Carmen
González-Murua, Carmen
Martins-Loução, Maria A
Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro M
author_sort Ariz, Idoia
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In plants, nitrate (NO(3)(-)) nutrition gives rise to a natural N isotopic signature (δ(15)N), which correlates with the δ(15)N of the N source. However, little is known about the relationship between the δ(15)N of the N source and the (14)N/(15)N fractionation in plants under ammonium (NH(4)(+)) nutrition. When NH(4)(+ )is the major N source, the two forms, NH(4)(+ )and NH(3), are present in the nutrient solution. There is a 1.025 thermodynamic isotope effect between NH(3 )(g) and NH(4)(+ )(aq) which drives to a different δ(15)N. Nine plant species with different NH(4)(+)-sensitivities were cultured hydroponically with NO(3)(- )or NH(4)(+ )as the sole N sources, and plant growth and δ(15)N were determined. Short-term NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )uptake experiments at pH 6.0 and 9.0 (which favours NH(3 )form) were carried out in order to support and substantiate our hypothesis. N source fractionation throughout the whole plant was interpreted on the basis of the relative transport of NH(4)(+ )and NH(3). RESULTS: Several NO(3)(-)-fed plants were consistently enriched in (15)N, whereas plants under NH(4)(+ )nutrition were depleted of (15)N. It was shown that more sensitive plants to NH(4)(+ )toxicity were the most depleted in (15)N. In parallel, N-deficient pea and spinach plants fed with (15)NH(4)(+ )showed an increased level of NH(3 )uptake at alkaline pH that was related to the (15)N depletion of the plant. Tolerant to NH(4)(+ )pea plants or sensitive spinach plants showed similar trend on (15)N depletion while slight differences in the time kinetics were observed during the initial stages. The use of RbNO(3 )as control discarded that the differences observed arise from pH detrimental effects. CONCLUSIONS: This article proposes that the negative values of δ(15)N in NH(4)(+)-fed plants are originated from NH(3 )uptake by plants. Moreover, this depletion of the heavier N isotope is proportional to the NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in plants species. Therefore, we hypothesise that the low affinity transport system for NH(4)(+ )may have two components: one that transports N in the molecular form and is associated with fractionation and another that transports N in the ionic form and is not associated with fractionation.
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spelling pubmed-32242122011-11-27 Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants Ariz, Idoia Cruz, Cristina Moran, Jose F González-Moro, María B García-Olaverri, Carmen González-Murua, Carmen Martins-Loução, Maria A Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro M BMC Plant Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: In plants, nitrate (NO(3)(-)) nutrition gives rise to a natural N isotopic signature (δ(15)N), which correlates with the δ(15)N of the N source. However, little is known about the relationship between the δ(15)N of the N source and the (14)N/(15)N fractionation in plants under ammonium (NH(4)(+)) nutrition. When NH(4)(+ )is the major N source, the two forms, NH(4)(+ )and NH(3), are present in the nutrient solution. There is a 1.025 thermodynamic isotope effect between NH(3 )(g) and NH(4)(+ )(aq) which drives to a different δ(15)N. Nine plant species with different NH(4)(+)-sensitivities were cultured hydroponically with NO(3)(- )or NH(4)(+ )as the sole N sources, and plant growth and δ(15)N were determined. Short-term NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )uptake experiments at pH 6.0 and 9.0 (which favours NH(3 )form) were carried out in order to support and substantiate our hypothesis. N source fractionation throughout the whole plant was interpreted on the basis of the relative transport of NH(4)(+ )and NH(3). RESULTS: Several NO(3)(-)-fed plants were consistently enriched in (15)N, whereas plants under NH(4)(+ )nutrition were depleted of (15)N. It was shown that more sensitive plants to NH(4)(+ )toxicity were the most depleted in (15)N. In parallel, N-deficient pea and spinach plants fed with (15)NH(4)(+ )showed an increased level of NH(3 )uptake at alkaline pH that was related to the (15)N depletion of the plant. Tolerant to NH(4)(+ )pea plants or sensitive spinach plants showed similar trend on (15)N depletion while slight differences in the time kinetics were observed during the initial stages. The use of RbNO(3 )as control discarded that the differences observed arise from pH detrimental effects. CONCLUSIONS: This article proposes that the negative values of δ(15)N in NH(4)(+)-fed plants are originated from NH(3 )uptake by plants. Moreover, this depletion of the heavier N isotope is proportional to the NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in plants species. Therefore, we hypothesise that the low affinity transport system for NH(4)(+ )may have two components: one that transports N in the molecular form and is associated with fractionation and another that transports N in the ionic form and is not associated with fractionation. BioMed Central 2011-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3224212/ /pubmed/21575190 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-11-83 Text en Copyright ©2011 Ariz et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ariz, Idoia
Cruz, Cristina
Moran, Jose F
González-Moro, María B
García-Olaverri, Carmen
González-Murua, Carmen
Martins-Loução, Maria A
Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro M
Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants
title Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants
title_full Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants
title_fullStr Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants
title_full_unstemmed Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants
title_short Depletion of the heaviest stable N isotope is associated with NH(4)(+)/NH(3 )toxicity in NH(4)(+)-fed plants
title_sort depletion of the heaviest stable n isotope is associated with nh(4)(+)/nh(3 )toxicity in nh(4)(+)-fed plants
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3224212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21575190
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-11-83
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