Abstract
Annual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology
Vol. 47:
569-593
(Volume publication date June 1996)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.arplant.47.1.569)
THE MOLECULAR-GENETICS OF NITROGEN ASSIMILATION INTO AMINO ACIDS IN HIGHER PLANTS H.-M. Lam, K. T. Coschigano, I. C. Oliveira, R. Melo-Oliveira, and G. M. Coruzzi Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY 10003 ▪ Abstract Nitrogen assimilation is a vital process controlling plant growth and development. Inorganic nitrogen is assimilated into the amino acids glutamine, glutamate, asparagine, and aspartate, which serve as important nitrogen carriers in plants. The enzymes glutamine synthetase (GS), glutamate synthase (GOGAT), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), aspartate aminotransferase (AspAT), and asparagine synthetase (AS) are responsible for the biosynthesis of these nitrogen-carrying amino acids. Biochemical studies have revealed the existence of multiple isoenzymes for each of these enzymes. Recent molecular analyses demonstrate that each enzyme is encoded by a gene family wherein individual members encode distinct isoenzymes that are differentially regulated by environmental stimuli, metabolic control, developmental control, and tissue/cell-type specificity. We review the recent progress in using molecular-genetic approaches to delineate the regulatory mechanisms controlling nitrogen assimilation into amino acids and to define the physiological role of each isoenzyme involved in this metabolic pathway. Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)Auswirkungen des Herbizids Basta® auf die Weinrebe und den Falschen Mehltau Gesunde Pflanzen 60(3):101-110 (2008) Inhibition of ammonium assimilation restores elongation of seminal rice roots repressed by high levels of exogenous ammonium Physiologia Plantarum 134(1):183-190 (2008) Genetic engineering of improved nitrogen use efficiency in rice by the tissue-specific expression of
alanine aminotransferase Plant Biotechnology Journal 6(7):722-732 (2008) Spirulina nitrate-assimilating enzymes (NR, NiR, GS) have higher specific activities and are more stable than those of rice Physiology and Molecular Biology of Plants 14(3):179-182 (2008) Transcription factors relevant to auxin signalling coordinate broad-spectrum metabolic shifts including sulphur metabolism Journal of Experimental Botany 59(10):2831-2846 (2008)
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