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Plant Physiology 1981-Nov

Enzymes of Purine Biosynthesis and Catabolism in Glycine max: I. COMPARISON OF ACTIVITIES WITH N(2) FIXATION AND COMPOSITION OF XYLEM EXUDATE DURING NODULE DEVELOPMENT.

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K R Schubert

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Abstrakt

During the period examined from 12 to 63 days after planting, the ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid, were the predominant nitrogenous solutes in the xylem exudate of soybeans (Glycine max [L.]) growing solely on symbiotically fixed nitrogen, accounting for approximately 60% and greater than 95% of the total nitrogen in the xylem exudate before and after the onset of active nitrogen fixation, respectively. For plants between 18 and 49 days of age, the apparent rate of ureide export estimated from concentrations of ureides in xylem exudate collected over a period of one hour was closely related to the rate of nitrogen fixation estimated from measurements of C(2)H(2) reduction by nodulated root systems. After this time, the apparent rate of ureide export per plant continued to increase, reaching a maximum value at day 63 of 12 micromoles per plant per hour, even though the rate of C(2)H(2) reduction per plant declined approximately four-fold. The most probable pathway for the biosynthesis of ureides involves the catabolism of purines. The levels of phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PRPP) synthetase, which catalyzes the formation of the PRPP required for purine synthesis, increased in parallel with the rates of nitrogen fixation (C(2)H(2)) from day 18 reaching a maximum value of 13.9 micromoles per plant per hour at day 49, and then both activities declined rapidly. During the period of active nitrogen fixation the ratio of PRPP synthesis estimated from measurements of PRPP synthetase activity in cell-free extracts to the apparent rate of ureide export was between 1 and 2. The activities of the enzymes of purine catabolism, xanthine dehydrogenase, uricase, and allantoinase, increased in parallel with the increases in nodule mass and the export of ureides with maximum activities of 13, 119, and 79 micromoles per plant per hour, corresponding with apparent rates of ureide export in the range of 9.5 to 11.9 micromoles per plant per hour. These results demonstrate that there is a close association between nitrogen fixation, PRPP synthetase activity, and ureide export in soybeans and support the proposal that recently-fixed nitrogen is utilized in the de novo synthesis of purines which are subsequently catabolized to produce the ureides.

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