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PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 104, Issue 1 171-178, Copyright © 1994 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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METABOLISM AND ENZYMOLOGY |
Adaptations of Photosynthetic Electron Transport, Carbon Assimilation, and Carbon Partitioning in Transgenic Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Plants to Changes in Nitrate Reductase Activity
C. H. Foyer, J. C. Lescure, C. Lefebvre, J. F. Morot-Gaudry, M. Vincentz and H. Vaucheret
Laboratoire du Metabolisme (C.H.F., J.-C.L., C.L., J.-F.M.-G.), and Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire (M.V., H.V.), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Route de Saint-Cyr, 78026 Versailles Cedex, France
Transgenic Nicotiana plumbaginifolia plants that express either a 5-fold
increase or a 20-fold decrease in nitrate reductase (NR) activity were used
to study the relationships between carbon and nitrogen metabolism in
leaves. Under saturating irradiance the maximum rate of photosynthesis, per
unit surface area, was decreased in the low NR expressors but was
relatively unchanged in the high NR expressors compared with the wild-type
controls. However, when photosynthesis was expressed on a chlorophyll (Chl)
basis the low NR plants had comparable or even higher values than the
wild-type plants. Surprisingly, the high NR expressors showed very similar
rates of photosynthesis and respiration to the wild-type plants and
contained identical amounts of leaf Chl, carbohydrate, and protein. These
plants were provided with a saturating supply of nitrate plus a basal level
of ammonium during all phases of growth. Under these conditions
overexpression of NR had little impact on leaf metabolism and did not
stimulate growth or biomass production. Large differences in photochemical
quenching and nonphotochemical quenching components of Chl a fluorescence,
as well as the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence, (FV/FM), were
apparent in the low NR expressors in comparison with the wild-type
controls. Light intensity-dependent increases in nonphotochemical quenching
and decreases in FV/FM were greatest in the low NR expressors, whereas
photochemical quenching decreased uniformly with increasing irradiance in
all plant types. Nonphotochemical quenching was increased at all except the
lowest irradiances in the low NR expressors, allowing photosystem II to
remain oxidized on its acceptor side. The relative contributions of
photochemical and nonphotochemical quenching of Chl a fluorescence with
changing irradiance were virtually identical in the high NR expressors and
the wild-type controls. Zeaxanthin was present in all leaves at high
irradiances; however, at high irradiance leaves from the low NR expressors
contained considerably more zeaxanthin and less violaxanthin than wild-type
controls or high NR expressors. The leaves of the low NR expressors
contained less Chl, protein, and amino acids than controls but retained
more carbohydrate (starch and sucrose) than the wild type or high NR
expressors. Sucrose phosphate synthase activities were remarkably similar
in all plant types regardless of the NR activity. In contrast
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activities were increased on a Chl or
protein basis in the low NR expressors compared with the wild-type controls
or high NR expressors. We conclude that large decreases in NR have profound
repercussions for photosynthesis and carbon partitioning within the leaf
but that increases in NR have negligible effects.
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