4.7 Review

Nitrate uptake and reduction in higher and lower plants

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 23, Issue 10, Pages 1005-1024

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-3040.2000.00595.x

Keywords

molecular approaches; nitrate uptake; nitrate reductase; physiology

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The nitrogen compounds nitrate and ammonium are the minerals that plants need in large quantities and which limit their growth in temperate zones. The nitrate assimilation pathway starts with nitrate uptake followed by nitrate reduction resulting in ammonium which is fixed into the amino acids glutamine and glutamate in most plants. This review concentrates on nitrate uptake and nitrate reduction with respect to higher and lower plants. The physiology and the progress in molecular approaches of both processes are considered. For nitrate uptake the well-established uptake systems are discussed and special attention is drawn to nitrate sensing and the nitrate carrier. Knowledge, particularly on nitrate sensing is rare, but it seems to be the first step in a signal transduction chain triggered by nitrate. Therefore further work should consider this topic more frequently. For nitrate reductase the focus is on the posttranslational modification as a regulatory tool for nitrate assimilation, on the intersections of carbon and nitrogen metabolism and on the molecular approaches. A few remarks on how environmental conditions affect nitrate assimilation are also included. Further progress is needed to understand the transduction of positive and negative signals from the environment affecting the expression of genes coding for the nitrate assimilating pathway.

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