Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses

Author:

Akhtar Kashif1ORCID,Ain Noor ul2,Prasad P. V. Vara3,Naz Misbah4,Aslam Mehtab Muhammad5,Djalovic Ivica6,Riaz Muhammad7,Ahmad Shakeel1,Varshney Rajeev K.8ORCID,He Bing9,Wen Ronghui1

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Subtropical Agro‐bioresources, Guangxi Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Biology, College of Life Science and Technology Guangxi University Nanning China

2. Shenzhen Branch, Guangdong Laboratory for Lingnan Modern Agriculture, Genome Analysis Laboratory of the Ministry of Agriculture, Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Shenzhen China

3. Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Collaborative Research on Sustainable Intensification Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

4. Institute of Environment and Ecology, School of the Environment and Safety Engineering Jiangsu University Zhenjiang China

5. College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources (CAFNR), Division of Plant Sciences & Technology University of Missouri Columbia Missouri USA

6. Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops National Institute of the Republic of Serbia Novi Sad Serbia

7. Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering Government College University Faisalabad Faisalabad Pakistan

8. WA State Agricultural Biotechnology Centre, Centre for Crop and Food Innovation, Food Futures Institute Murdoch University Murdoch Western Australia Australia

9. Guangxi Key Laboratory of Agro‐Environment and Agric‐Products Safety, College of Agriculture Guangxi University Nanning China

Abstract

AbstractNitrogen (N) as an inorganic macronutrient is inevitable for plant growth, development, and biomass production. Many external factors and stresses, such as acidity, alkalinity, salinity, temperature, oxygen, and rainfall, affect N uptake and metabolism in plants. The uptake of ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3) in plants mainly depends on soil properties. Under the sufficient availability of NO3 (>1 mM), low‐affinity transport system is activated by gene network NRT1, and under low NO3 availability (<1 mM), high‐affinity transport system starts functioning encoded by NRT2 family of genes. Further, under limited N supply due to edaphic and climatic factors, higher expression of the AtNRT2.4 and AtNRT2.5T genes of the NRT2 family occur and are considered as N remobilizing genes. The NH4+ ion is the final form of N assimilated by cells mediated through the key enzymes glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. The WRKY1 is a major transcription factor of the N regulation network in plants. However, the transcriptome and metabolite profiles show variations in N assimilation metabolites, including glycine, glutamine, and aspartate, under abiotic stresses. The overexpression of NO3 transporters (OsNRT2.3a and OsNRT1.1b) can significantly improve the biomass and yield of various crops. Altering the expression levels of genes could be a valuable tool to improve N metabolism under the challenging conditions of soil and environment, such as unfavorable temperature, drought, salinity, heavy metals, and nutrient stress.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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