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Plant Physiology 83:341-348 (1987) © 1987 American Society of Plant Biologists Regulation of Assimilate Partitioning in Soybean 1Initial Effects following Change in Nitrate SupplyDepartment of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7L 3N6
Increased concentrations of nitrate in a nutrient solution (2, 5, and 10 millimolar KNO3) were correlated with increased shoot:root ratios of non-nodulated soybeans (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) grown in sand culture. While altering the pattern of C and N partitioning, the N treatments did not affect whole plant photosynthesis over the study period. To determine the mechanism responsible for the observed changes in assimilate partitioning, detailed C and N budgets were worked out with plants from each N treatment over three consecutive 4-day periods of midvegetative growth. The information for the C and N budgets from the 2 and 10 millimolar NO3 treatments was combined with data on the composition of xylem and phloem exudates to construct a series of models of C and N transport and partitioning. These models were used to outine a `chain-reaction' of cause-and-effect relationships that may account for the observed changes in assimilate partitioning in these plants. The proposed mechanism identifies two features which may be important in regulating the partitioning of N and other nutrients within the whole plant. (a) The concentration of N in the phloem is highly correlated with the N concentration in the xylem. (b) The amount of N which cycles through the rootfrom phloem imported from the shoot to xylem exported by the rootis regulated by the root's requirement for N: only that N in excess of the root's N requirements is returned to the shoot in the xylem. Therefore, roots seem to have the highest priority for N in times of N stress.
1 Supported by an National Sciences and Engineering Research Council (Canada) Operating Grant to D. B. L. and an NSERC Postgraduate Scholarship to J. K. V. This article has been cited by other articles:
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