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Carbon and nitrogen metabolism in the seagrass, Zostera marina L.:: Environmental control of enzymes involved in carbon allocation and nitrogen assimilation

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY
Volume 350, Issue 1-2, Pages 216-233

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2007.05.034

Keywords

carbon; glutamine synthetase; nitrate reductase; nitrogen; sucrose synthase; sucrose-P synthase; Zostera marina

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This study experimentally examined influences of environmental variables on the activities of key enzymes involved in carbon and nitrogen metabolism of the submersed marine angiosperm, Zostera marina L. Nitrate reductase activity in leaf tissue was correlated with both water-column nitrate concentrations and leaf sucrose levels. Under elevated nitrate, shoot nitrate reductase activity increased in both light and dark periods if carbohydrate reserves were available. When water-column nitrate was low, glutamine synthetase activity in leaf tissue increased with environmental ammonium. In contrast, glutamine synthetase activity in belowground tissues was statistically related to both nitrate and temperature. At the optimal growth temperature for this species (ca. 25 degrees C), increased water-column nitrate promoted an increase in glutamine synthetase activity of belowground tissues. As temperatures diverged from the optimum, this nitrate effect on glutamine synthetase was no longer evident. Activities of both sucrose synthase and sucrose-P synthase were directly correlated with temperature. Sucrose-P synthase activity also was correlated with salinity, and sucrose synthase activity was statistically related to tissue ammonium. Overall, the enzymatic responses that were observed indicate a tight coupling between carbon and nitrogen metabolism that is strongly influenced by prevailing environmental conditions, especially temperature, salinity, and environmental nutrient levels. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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