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Activity of glutamine synthetase and glutamate dehydrogenase in trifolium subterraneum l. and allium cepa l: effects of mycorrhizal infection and phosphate nutrition

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TLDR
It is concluded that vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are able to assimilate ammonium via GS, which would be important in increased uptake of nitrogen which is an inevitable prerequisite for increased growth following relief of phosphate stress.
Abstract
Summary Activities of glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase were determined using crude extracts of roots and shoots of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants of Trifolium subterraneum L. and Allium cepa L., grown at different levels of fertilizer phosphate. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity was low in all tissues [0.1 to 1.6 μmol NAD(P)H oxidized min−1 gFW−1 tissue] and there was no consistent effect of mycorrhizal infection or phosphate nutrition on this activity. Glutamine synthetase (GS) activity (assayed by the transferase method) was in the range 1 to 40/iimol γ-glutamyl hydroxamate produced min−1 gFW−1. In general, activity of this enzyme was low in phosphate-deficient plants and was increased both by mycorrhizal infection and by improved phosphate supply. In T. subterraneum routine assays of GS were done on roots only. The effects of mycorrhizal infection in increasing enzyme activity in roots were similar whether natural soil inoculum (containing a mixture of several mycorrhizal fungi) or inoculum of Glomus mosseae Nichol. & Gerd. was used. Both increased phosphate supply and mycorrhizal infection increased nodulation of clover plants as well as GS activity, so that it was difficult to relate changes in GS activity to the interacting effects of mycorrhizal infection and phosphate nutrition. Onions had low GS activity in uninfected roots, compared with shoots. Again improved phosphate supply resulted in increased enzyme activity in both roots and shoots. However, the patterns of interaction between phosphate supply, P concentration in tissues, mycorrhizal infection and enzyme activity were different in the two tissues. In shoots, as expected, the effects were consistent with an indirect effect of mycorrhizal infection on enzyme activity, via improved P nutrition. In roots there appeared to be a ‘fungal effect’ superimposed on the phosphate effect. This was investigated by manipulating the amount of fungal tissue in mycorrhizal roots via differences in propagule density of G. mosseae in soil. Results were again consistent with the hypothesis that the mycorrhizal fungi contributed GS activity to the symbiotic root system. Fungal structures were separated from roots following digestion in cellulase and pectinase. GS activity was high in fungal tissue from young roots (29 to 31 d), but low in older infections (55 d). The high activity could not have been caused by contamination of fungal tissue by root cells. The digestion technique reduced GS activity in uninfected and infected root segments, so that results obtained with separated fungi are not quantitatively comparable with those obtained from extracts of fresh tissues. We conclude that vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are able to assimilate ammonium via GS. This ability would be important in increased uptake of nitrogen which is an inevitable prerequisite for increased growth following relief of phosphate stress. It is also consistent with the recent findings by others that hyphae of G. mosseae can absorb and translocate 15NH+4

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Journal ArticleDOI

Roles of Arbuscular Mycorrhizas in Plant Nutrition and Growth: New Paradigms from Cellular to Ecosystem Scales

TL;DR: New physiological and molecular evidence shows that for phosphorus the mycorrhizal pathway (MP) is operational regardless of plant growth responses (positive or negative) and has important implications for consideration of AM symbioses in ecological, agronomic, and evolutionary contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review on the role of mycorrhizal fungi in the uptake of phosphorus by plants

TL;DR: Mycorrhizal plants have been shown to increase the uptake of poorly soluble P sources, such as iron and aluminium phosphate and rock phosphates, however, studies in which the soil P has been labelled with radioactive 32P indicated that both mycor rhizal and non-mycorrhIZal plants utilized the similarly labelled P sources in soil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological Interactions Between Symbionts in Vesicular-Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Plants

TL;DR: The aim of this book is to provide a Discussion of the Foundations of Symbiosis, as well as some suggestions for further investigation, to help clarify the role of phosphorus in the synthesis of phytochemical compounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi can transfer substantial amounts of nitrogen to their host plant from organic material

TL;DR: It is indicated that uptake from organic N could be important in AM symbiosis for both plant and fungal partners and that some AM fungi may acquire inorganic N from organic sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simultaneous P-solubilizing and biocontrol activity of microorganisms: potentials and future trends

TL;DR: In vitro studies show the potential of P-solubilizing microorganisms for the simultaneous synthesis and release of pathogen-suppressing metabolites, mainly siderophores, phytohormones, and lytic enzymes, which benefit plant growth and development.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus Assay in Column Chromatography

TL;DR: If the highest accuracy was not required, the following manipulations simplified and speeded multiple total phosphorus determinations on the eluates from column chromatographic separations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved procedures for clearing roots and staining parasitic and vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi for rapid assessment of infection.

TL;DR: To improve stain penetration and clearing in whole mycorrhizal roots of onion and other host plants, and in roots infected by other fungi, the following two procedures are developed, which give deeply stained fungal structures which show distinctly against the outlines of the cells in the cortex of intact roots.
Journal ArticleDOI

A test of a modified line intersect method of estimating root length

D. Tennant
- 01 Nov 1975 - 
TL;DR: A test of a modified line intersect method of estimating root length and the results show positive results for both the horizontal and vertical lengths of the line.
Journal ArticleDOI

NITROGEN ASSIMILATION AND TRANSPORT IN VASCULAR LAND PLANTS IN RELATION TO INTRACELLULAR pH REGULATION

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the assimilation of ammonium ion in plant cell cytoplasm produces at least one H+ per NH+4; N2 fixation generates 0.1-0.2 H+/OH per N assimilated; NO-3 assimilation produces almost one OH/OH- per NO+3.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes of pH across the rhizosphere induced by roots

TL;DR: The pH at the root surface will often differ from the pH a few millimeters away by 1-2 units as mentioned in this paper, and the pH buffering capacity, moisture content, initial pH and pCO2 of the soil.
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