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Alanine, not ammonia, is excreted from N2-fixing soybean nodule bacteroids

Authors :
Waters, James K.
Hughes, Bobby L., II
Purcell, Larry C.
Gerhardt, Klaus O.
Mawhinney, Thomas P.
Emerich, David W.
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. Sept 29, 1998, Vol. 95 Issue 20, p12038, 5 p.
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

Symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the process whereby nitrogen-fixing bacteria enter into associations with plants, provides the major source of nitrogen for the biosphere. Nitrogenase, a bacterial enzyme, catalyzes the reduction of atmospheric dinitrogen to ammonium. In rhizobia-leguminous plant symbioses, the current model of nitrogen transfer from the symbiotic form of the bacteria, called a bacteroid, to the plant is that nitrogenase-generated ammonia diffuses across the bacteroid membrane and is assimilated into amino acids outside of the bacteroid. We purified soybean nodule bacteroids by a procedure that removed contaminating plant proteins and found that alanine was the major nitrogen-containing compound excreted. Bacteroids incubated in the presence of 15[N.sub.2] excreted alanine highly enriched in 15N. The ammonium in these assays neither accumulated significantly nor was enriched in 15N. The results demonstrate that a transport mechanism rather than diffusion functions at this critical step of nitrogen transfer from the bacteroids to the plant host. Alanine may serve only as a transport species, but this would permit physiological separation of the transport of fixed nitrogen from other nitrogen metabolic functions commonly mediated through glutamate.

Details

ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
95
Issue :
20
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.21232126