Abstract
Soluble organic nitrogen, including protein and amino acids, was found to be a
ubiquitous form of soil N in diverse Australian environments. Fine roots of
species representative of these environments were found to be active in the
metabolism of glycine. The ability to incorporate
[15N]glycine was widespread among plant
species from subantarctic to tropical communities. In species from
subantarctic herbfield, subtropical coral cay, subtropical rainforest and wet
heathland, [15N]glycine incorporation ranged
from 26 to 45 % of
15NH4+
incorporation and was 2- to 3-fold greater than
15NO3-
incorporation. Most semiarid mulga and tropical savanna woodland species
incorporated [15N]glycine and
15NO3- in
similar amounts, 18–26 % of
15NH4+
incorporation. We conclude that the potential to utilise amino acids as N
sources is of widespread occurrence in plant communities and is not restricted
to those from low temperature regimes or where N mineralisation is limited.
Seedlings of Hakea (Proteaceae) were shown to metabolise
glycine, with a rapid transfer of 15N from glycine to
serine and other amino compounds. The ability to take up and metabolise
glycine was unaffected by the presence of equimolar concentrations of
NO3- and
NH4+. Isonicotinic acid
hydrazide (INH) did not inhibit the transfer of 15N-
label from glycine to serine indicating that serine hydroxymethyltransferase
was not active in glycine catabolism. In contrast aminooxyacetate (AOA)
strongly inhibited transfer of 15N from glycine to
serine and labelling of other amino compounds, suggesting that glycine is
metabolised in roots and cluster roots of Hakea via an
aminotransferase.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
125 articles.
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