Biological Sciences Department, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1
5YQ, United Kingdom (B.G.F.); and School of Biosciences, University of
Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom (J.A.C.)
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Nitrate, an ion more
accustomed to the subterranean darkness of the soil, found its place in
the sun for four days in July 2002 when it was the focus of the Fifth
International Symposium on Nitrate Assimilation: Molecular and Genetic
Aspects (NAMGA) at the University of Córdoba in Spain. The highly
successful series of NAMGA meetings was initiated in 1982 by Andreas
Müller and Ralf Mendel with the aim of bringing together
scientists from diverse backgrounds working on
NO3
assimilation in plants,
fungi, and bacteria. An attractive feature of almost 50 presentations
was that their topics ranged from transcriptional regulation to
cofactor biosynthesis and protein structure. Also included were brief
overviews of developments in processes that compete with
NO3
assimilation, namely
denitrification and NO3
reduction to NH3 by anaerobic, fermentative bacteria.
 |
REGULATION OF THE NITRATE ASSIMILATORY PATHWAY |
Some of the most significant advances reported in Córdoba
were concerned with how NO3
assimilation is regulated. The different facets of this problem covered
questions about how the presence of
NO3
is detected; how the
NO3
signal is communicated to
the genome; how NO3
assimilation is regulated by the general N status of the cell; how
NH4+ assimilation is regulated;
and how N assimilation is regulated in response to the availability of carbon.
Transcription Factors and Signals
A common feature that links the
NO3
assimilatory pathway in
plants, bacteria, and fungi is its induction by
NO3
and its feedback
regulation by the products of
NO3
assimilation. The model
for how this is achieved was developed in fungi and involves a
combination of pathway-specific regulators that respond to
NO3
and global regulators that
regulate NO3
assimilation (and
other metabolic pathways) in response to the general N status of the
cell. In Emericella (Aspergillus)
nidulans, the pathway-specific transcription factor is NirA,
a member of the GAL4 Zn2+ binuclear cluster
family, whereas the global regulator is AreA, a GATA transcription
factor. The interactions between these transcription factors and their
binding sites within the bidirectional promoter that regulates the
niaD and niiA genes (for nitrate reductase [NR]
and nitrite reductase, respectively) are the subject of a collaboration
between the groups of Scazzocchio (Université Paris Sud, Paris,
France) and Strauss (University of Agricultural Sciences, Vienna). The emerging impression from this work is that the
distinctions between the roles of NirA and AreA in
NO3
induction and feedback
repression are not as clear-cut as traditionally thought. Studies with
novel gain-of-function mutants in areA and nirA
have shown that AreA is also capable of a
NO3
sensing role, even in the
absence of NirA. Scazzocchio presented genetic and biochemical evidence
that the NirA and AreA proteins interact in vivo and in vitro. Berger
(University of Agricultural Sciences, Vienna), using a
NirA::GFP fusion expressed in fungal hyphae, observed that
import of NirA into the nucleus is
NO3
dependent, but it seems
that binding to DNA additionally requires the function of AreA.
Another long-standing idea about how
NO3
assimilation is regulated
was placed under the microscope in a study reported by Galván
(University of Córdoba). Pioneering work by David Cove and
Claudio Scazzocchio led to a model in which the product of the
niaD gene (NR) was able to repress its own transcription and that of the other NO3
assimilatory genes, a classic case of autoregulation. Since then, the
discovery of pathway-specific and global transcription factors (such as
NirA and AreA) has shifted the attention to more conventional mechanisms of transcriptional control. What is the role, then, for NR
in transcriptional regulation? The idea has gradually emerged that the
phenomenon of "autoregulation" is in some way linked to
NO3
transport. The exciting
question, convincingly answered at this meeting, was by what mechanism
does NO3
transport interact
with the transcriptional apparatus to regulate NO3
assimilation? The question
was addressed by Galván and her colleagues using the unicellular
alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, in which NR-deficient
mutants show the overexpression of
NO3
assimilatory genes that is
characteristic of autoregulation. With the help of mutants defective in
different NO3
transport
systems, they were able to demonstrate that
NO3
sensing occurs
intracellularly so that the role of the
NO3
transport system is to
deliver the NO3
to the place
where it is sensed. System I, the most efficient of the multiple
NO3
uptake systems in this
alga, is effective at NO3
uptake even at the submicromolar concentrations found in media unsupplemented with NO3
. If NR
is inactive (such as in an NR
mutant), the
NO3
will accumulate in the
cell and will hyperinduce the
NO3
assimilatory pathway.
These results are very satisfying in their potential to explain
apparent autoregulatory phenomena associated with NR mutants in other
species. However, intriguing new results reported by Lepetit (Institut
National de la Recherche Agronomique, Montpellier, France) suggest that
all may not be so simple. Lepetit and colleagues studied the regulation
of NO3
assimilatory genes in
Arabidopsis mutants defective for one or both of the two NR genes
(NIA1 and NIA2). In the nia1nia2
double mutant (and in the nia2 single mutant), the
expression of some NO3
assimilatory genes was up-regulated in a manner reminiscent of autoregulation. The overexpressed genes were NIA1 and the
AtNRT1.1 NO3
transporter gene, whereas other genes of the pathway were unaffected. They were able to rule out the most obvious possibilities that the
mechanism was related to superinduction by accumulated
NO3
or to diminished feedback
repression by reduced N metabolites. They concluded that the most
likely explanation was negative regulation of NIA1 and
AtNRT1.1 by NO2
(or
perhaps NO), which was relieved in the NR mutants. Feedback regulation
by NO2
can be seen as a
mechanism for preventing accumulation of toxic NO2
in the roots under
conditions that inhibit NR (such as anoxia during flooding).
Additional evidence that
NO3
and
NO2
are not interchangeable in
their signaling effects came from studies on gene regulation in two
diverse bacterial species. Gunsalus (University of California, Los
Angeles) reported that the Escherichia coli NarX
NO3
sensor protein (a
transmembrane His kinase) recognizes
NO3
and
NO2
, but has an affinity for
the former that is over 100-fold greater than for the latter. Omata
(University of Nagoya, Japan) reported that in the cyanobacterium
Synechococcus sp PCC7942, the inductive signal for the
NO3
assimilatory pathway comes
not from NO3
, but from
NO2
, generated intracellularly
(by nitrite reductase) or supplied externally.
The cyanobacterium Synechococcus has one of the
simplest regulatory systems, where the pathway-specific regulator is a
LysR-type transcription factor (NtcB) and the global N regulator is a
cAMP receptor protein-type transcription factor (NtcA). In most
species, the metabolite(s) that are monitored by the cell to detect
changes in N status have not been rigorously identified. However, using an in vitro transcription assay, Omata demonstrated that 2-oxoglutarate is required for transcription from NtcA-dependent promoters in Synechococcus. Flores (University of Seville, Spain)
reported the engineering of a strain of Synechococcus sp.
that can absorb 2-oxoglutarate from the medium and demonstrated that
supplying 2-oxoglutarate to this strain stimulated expression of
NH4+-repressible genes.
Therefore, "ammonium repression" in this species appears to be a
consequence of the depletion of the 2-oxoglutarate pool when sufficient
NH4+ is available.
There was a notable absence at the meeting of information about
transcription factors that regulate
NO3
assimilation in higher
plants. For reasons that are unclear, forward genetic approaches of the
kind that have been so successful in fungi have singularly failed to
identify similar kinds of NO3
regulatory mutants in plants. Selection for resistance to chlorate (a
NO3
analog) has been the
method of choice for identifying
NO3
assimilatory mutants in
plants as well as fungi. Cheng (University of Iowa) reported on
progress with the analysis of a novel chlorate-resistant Arabidopsis
mutant (cr88), which was isolated in a screen for mutants
with abnormal regulation of NR. The cr88 mutant has around 50% of the wild-type levels of NR activity, but it also shows defects
in photomorphogenesis and in the light-induction of a subset of
light-regulated genes (including NIA2). Map-based cloning of
CR88 has now revealed it to encode a Heat Shock Protein 90 chaperone protein that is localized to the stromal compartment of the
chloroplast. Possible functions suggested for CR88 include a role in
protein import into the stroma or in the maturation of a subset of
stromal proteins. These results highlight the complexity of the
mechanisms regulating NIA gene expression in plants and may
help to explain why true NO3
regulatory mutants have proved so elusive.
Reverse genetics seems likely to prove a more successful route to
NO3
regulatory loci in plants,
but the lack of any clear plant orthologs of AreA or NirA has thwarted
one obvious line of attack. However, there are hopes that
Chlamydomonas may turn out to be a more useful stepping
stone to NO3
regulatory genes
in higher plants. With this in mind, Galván (University of
Córdoba) reported studies on the Chlamydomonas NIT2
gene, a putative positive regulator of
NO3
assimilation whose
expression is repressed by NH4+
and has now been found to require intracellular
NO3
for its function. The
NIT2 gene encodes a 1,196-amino acid protein with no obvious
conserved motifs, but with Gln-rich regions typical of some classes of
transcription factor.
Beyond Transcription
Transcriptional control is by no means the whole story when
it comes to regulation of the
NO3
assimilatory pathway.
Caddick (University of Liverpool) reported that in E. nidulans, a number of structural and regulatory genes in the
pathway (including areA, niaD, and
niiA) are regulated by a mechanism involving
sequence-specific degradation of their mRNAs. The signal for
degradation appears to be Gln rather than NH4+,
and in the case of areA, the signaling mechanism has been
shown to require a 218-nucleotide sequence within the 3'-untranslated region. To add further complexity to the picture, a separate mechanism seems to be involved in stabilizing the niaD and
niiA transcripts in the presence of
NO2
or
NO3
.
Florencio (University of Seville) reported that the activity of one
isoform of Gln synthetase in Synechocystis is regulated by
protein-protein interactions with two inactivating factors (IF7 and
IF17) that are homologous polypeptides encoded by the gifA
and gifB genes, respectively. Both gif genes are
regulated by NtcA, and their expression is strongest in the presence of NH4+ when Gln synthase is inactivated.
Reactivation of Gln synthetase is mediated by a protease that degrades
at least IF7 and probably IF17.
Siverio (University of La Laguna, Tenerife) reported evidence that the
YNT1 NO3
transporter in the
yeast Hansenula polymorpha (Pichia angusta) is
posttranslationally modified in response to changes in N status, indicating the possible existence of a mechanism for rapid modulation of NO3
influx.
NO Signaling Here?
NO is an important second messenger in animals, and evidence that
it has a similar role in diverse signaling pathways in plants is
accumulating. Kaiser (University of Würzburg) reported data indicating that NR is a major contributor to NO production in plants.
However, there was also evidence for significant proportion of NO
biosynthesis that was not NR dependent; for example, plants cultivated
in the absence of NO3
and with
no detectable NR activity still displayed a low level of NO emission.
All attempts to demonstrate a role for NO synthase (NOS), the
NO-generating enzyme so intensively studied in mammalian systems,
proved unsuccessful. The apparent absence of NOS enzyme activity in
plants is in line with the failure so far to detect sequences
homologous to NOS in the plant genomes.
Stöhr (University of Darmstadt) described the properties of an
NO-generating enzyme, NO2
:NO
reductase, which is present in the plasma membrane fraction of roots.
In combination with a plasma membrane-bound form of NR, this could
provide a pathway for the enzymic conversion of NO3
to NO at the cell surface.
Stöhr suggested that the apoplastic NO produced by this pathway
might serve as a second messenger at low external
NO3
concentrations or in
defense from pathogens.
 |
INSIGHTS INTO ENZYME STRUCTURE AND ASSEMBLY |
Despite the massive interest in NR, only one structure, that of
the unusual periplasmic, dissimilatory NR from a sulfate-reducing bacterium, has so far been published. High-level expression of other
NRs, especially the plant enzyme, in a form that can be purified and
crystallized, remains a challenge. Therefore, of particular interest
was progress reported by Campbell (The Nitrate Elimination Company,
Lake Linden, MI). A simplified expression system using Pichia
pastoris now offers special promise for the production of a
soluble form of the Arabidopsis NR2 enzyme that, as a first step, might
be suitable for biosensor applications. More structures of NRs are
certainly required, presenting a challenge for the next NAMGA meeting.
Meanwhile, we were tantalized by the elegant and highly plausible
"three-dimensional model of a five-domain NR" based on structural
data from overexpressed fragments of the enzyme accumulated over many
years and presented at this meeting by Campbell.
Several speakers presented crystal structures of their proteins.
These included elegant structural studies at atomic resolution of the
Alcaligenes xylosoxidans blue copper nitrite reductase and
its mutants (Hasnain, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK), of
the apo-ModE transcription factor, required for molydopterin synthesis
by enteric bacteria (Boxer, University of Dundee, UK), and of
the free and DNA-bound forms of NarL, the
NO3
response regulator from
E. coli (Gunsalus, University of California, Los Angeles).
An inevitable recurring theme of the meeting was the discovery
from genome sequencing projects that many processes believed to be
simple are in fact quite complex, involving more proteins than
previously anticipated. Particular interest in the last five years has
focused on the periplasmic NRs (Nap) found in gram-negative bacteria.
These enzymes fulfill different physiological roles in different types
of bacteria, and multiple structural components that differ between
bacteria of different physiological types appear to correlate, at last
in part, with the physiology of the strain studied.
Moreno-Vivián (University of Córdoba) proposed that the
enigmatic NapF in Rhodobacter sphaeroides
is involved in the posttranslational assembly of a functional
NapA. The insertion of the prosthetic multicopper center into the
denitrification enzyme, nitrous oxide reductase of Pseudomonas
stutzeri, requires a posttranslational maturation complex encoded
by the nosDFYLtatE operon (tatE encodes a
component of the twin-Arg targeting pathway for the secretion of
partially folded redox proteins across the bacteria membrane). Zumft
(University of Karlsruhe, Germany) reviewed the progress in
understanding how this process is regulated, and the roles of these
components in copper acquisition and assembly. Many proteins are also
involved in the posttranslational assembly of c-type cytochromes such
as those involved in periplasmic
NO3
reduction by bacteria.
Ferguson (University of Oxford) reported that the Cys-X-X-Cys-His motif
in a c-type cytochrome can form a disulfide bond that must be reduced
before thio-ether bond formation can occur.
The molybdenum cofactor (Moco) is an essential component of NRs and
other molybdoenzymes. Schwarz (University of Braunschweig, Germany)
reported on the proteins CNX1 in plants and Gephyrin in humans involved
in catalyzing the final step of Moco biosynthesis, whose
structure-function relationship is becoming understood. Moco maturation
of molybdoenzymes by the Moco-sulfurase abscisic acid 3 (ABA3) as a
posttranslational substitution of a Mo-bound oxygen with a sulfur was
addressed by Mendel (University of Braunschweig). In
Chlamydomonas, Moco is bound to a small carrier
protein known as MocoCP. Ataya (University of Córdoba) reported
the cloning of a cDNA for MocoCP from Chlamydomonas using
microsequenced peptides as the starting point. Antibodies raised
against the recombinant MocoCP were used to demonstrate the likely
existence of related proteins in higher plants. The precise function of
MocoCPs is unknown, but there is speculation that it might act as a
Moco storage protein with a role in recycling Moco.
 |
THE NO3 TRANSPORT SYSTEM IN PLANTS: YET
MORE COMPLEXITY |
Multigene Families: Redundancy or
Diversity of
Function?
Chlamydomonas, the model organism for
NO3
transport research in
plants, has five known
NO3
/NO2
transport systems, comprising four plasma membrane influx systems with
differing substrate affinities and one plastidic
NO2
uptake system. The number
of structural genes so far implicated in these transport systems is
six. It is perhaps not surprising that the genetics of
NO3
transport in a
multicellular organism like a higher plant would prove to be even more
complex. The Arabidopsis genome contains seven members of the
NRT2 NO3
transporter gene family (AtNRT2.1-AtNRT2.7),
plus at least two NO3
transporters from an unrelated family (AtNRT1.1 and
AtNRT1.2). Krapp (Institut National de la Recherche
Agronomique, Versailles, France) and Glass (University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, Canada) reported their progress in trying to
elucidate the physiological roles of the different NRT1 and
NRT2 genes from knockout mutants, promoter-reporter
gene fusions, and analysis of mRNA expression patterns throughout the
plant. Previous studies from these laboratories have established
AtNRT2.1 as a major structural gene encoding the inducible
high-affinity NO3
influx
system in roots. Recent work discussed here made clear the
diverse regulatory properties and spatial patterns of expression displayed by different AtNRT2 genes. For example,
although AtNRT2.1 and AtNRT2.2 are induced by
NO3
in the classical manner,
other members of the family are unaffected by the N supply, or are even
repressed by NO3
; several of
the genes are expressed in the shoot and one is expressed in mature
pollen grains. Krapp reported that two AtNRT2 genes are
very strongly derepressed in a mutant (atnrt2a)
that has the AtNRT2.1 and AtNRT2.2
genes deleted, yet the mutant still has a major defect in the inducible
high-affinity NO3
influx
system. This suggests that these other AtNRT2 genes may not
contribute to high-affinity
NO3
influx. There is still no
information on the subcellular localization of the different NRT2
family members, leaving open the possibility that some may have roles
in intracellular NO3
transport.
It may have been of some comfort to the plant biologists at the meeting
to note that gene duplication and its attendant complications are not
something restricted to higher organisms. Enteric bacteria have been
revealed through genome sequencing projects to have three separate NRs
that enable them to reduce NO3
rapidly to NH4+ during anaerobic
growth. Cole (University of Birmingham, UK) reported that three
transport proteins, three NR complexes involving multiple components,
and two NO2
reduction pathways
were needed to enable fermentative bacteria to survive anaerobically
when NO3
is abundant, when
NO3
is scarce, or when all
nutrients are depleted.
One Gene, More Than One Function
Gene duplication is not the only route to complexity. The
Arabidopsis AtNRT1.1 (CHL1) gene encodes an
unusual dual-affinity component of the root
NO3
influx system that is
NO3
inducible and auxin
regulated. Crawford (University of California, San Diego) reported the
latest twist in the AtNRT1.1 story. Finding that reporter
gene fusions with the AtNRT1.1 promoter were strongly expressed in stomatal guard cells of mature leaves (as well as in roots
and in young shoot tissues), he and his collaborators investigated what
role this NO3
transporter
might play in stomatal function. They found that NO3
could substitute for
Cl
in light-induced stomatal opening, that
atnrt1.1 mutants were defective in this response (when
NO3
was the available anion),
and that the mutant guard cells were defective in
NO3
accumulation. When grown
on NO3
, atnrt1.1
mutants had reduced stomatal apertures and increased drought tolerance.
Thus, AtNRT1.1 emerges as fascinating example of a transporter with
diverse functions, not only contributing to high- and low-affinity
NO3
uptake by the root, but
also with a role in the control of stomatal opening.
One Transporter, More Than One Subunit?
Miller (Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, UK) reported
another example illustrating the value of Chlamydomonas as a
model for NO3
transport
research. It is known that the NRT2.1 and NRT2.2
genes that encode the high-affinity
NO3
transport Systems I and II
in Chlamydomonas require the product of a third gene
(NAR2) for their functional expression. NAR2
encodes a small (28-kD) protein with one to two transmembrane domains, but NAR2 homologs are restricted to the plant kingdom and
their sequences give little clue to their function. Miller's group has isolated three full-length NAR2 cDNAs from barley
(Hordeum vulgare) and used a Xenopus oocyte
expression system to show that mRNA from one of these
(HvNAR2.3) was able to reconstitute high-affinity NO3
transport activity when
coinjected with mRNA for the otherwise inactive HvNRT2.1 protein. It is
still unclear whether NAR2 is a second subunit of this
NO3
transporter or has another
role such as in the translocation of NRT2 to the plasma membrane. Other
members of the NAR2 family may have different functions: Paneque
(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Madrid) reported that
a member of the Arabidopsis NAR2 gene family
(WR3.1) is expressed most strongly in hydatodes and
stipules, is wound inducible and
NO3
inducible, and is partly
localized in the nuclear envelope.
 |
LONG-RANGE SIGNALING IN PLANTS |
Signals Going Up...
For many plant species,
NH4+ on its own is not the
preferred N source, and NH4+-fed
plants grow more slowly than
NO3
-fed plants and have
altered patterns of development. However, the negative effect of
NH4+ on vegetative growth is not
without a potential commercial advantage because the shift to
reproductive growth can lead to increased harvest indices and better
fruit quality. Lips (Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)
discussed a model for how NO3
and NH4+ may regulate the
balance between vegetative and reproductive growth. The model is based
on observations that NO3
promotes cytokinin production in the root and
NH4+ promotes ABA production.
Thus, a switch between NO3
and
NH4+ nutrition alters the
cytokinin/ABA balance in the xylem sap, providing a mechanism for
long-distance signaling from root to shoot. Walch-Liu (Hohenheim)
discussed the close link between NO3
supply to the roots and
increased rates of leaf expansion, which are correlated with increased
cytokinin fluxes from root to shoot. Latest results showed that
addition of NO3
to
NH4+-grown plants transiently
induced daily oscillations in leaf growth rates that were directly
correlated with oscillations in the concentration of cytokinins (but
not NO3
) in the xylem sap.
How might NO3
regulate
cytokinin production in the root? A potential control point in
cytokinin biosynthesis is in the step catalyzed by adenylate
isopentenyltransferase (IPT). Sakakibara (RIKEN, Japan) reported the
analysis of a family of seven Arabidopsis IPT genes and
identified two root-expressed genes (AtIPT3 and AtIPT5) that responded positively to increased
NO3
availability. This raises
the exciting possibility that one or both of these IPT genes
plays a pivotal role in the process of converting an external
NO3
signal into a long-range
cytokinin signal.
... and Signals Coming Down
Demand for N in the shoot has long been known as an important
regulator of NO3
uptake
activity in the root, but how is this demand communicated from the top
to the bottom of the plant? One possible signal that should be
positively correlated with the shoot's demand for N is the
phloem-mediated flux of sugars arriving in the root. Gojon (Institut
National de la Recherche Agronomique, Montpellier) reported that
external application of Suc to Arabidopsis roots stimulated not only
the AtNRT1.1 and AtNRT2.1
NO3
transporter genes, but
also a range of other nutrient transporter genes. There was a strong
correlation between those genes whose root expression was diurnally
regulated and those that were up-regulated by Suc. This would support
the idea that the rate of sugar export from the shoot plays an
important role in integrating nutrient uptake in the root with the
requirements of the shoot. However, more specific signals related to
the demand for particular nutrients are also likely to exist. In an
attempt to gain some insight into these signals, Gojon and colleagues
are using an Arabidopsis split root system in combination with Serial
Analysis of Gene Expression to identify genes responsive to long-range
signals related to changes in the N status of the shoot. In a
collection of 40,000 gene tags representing 5,000 different genes, they
found 85 genes whose expression levels were altered in one-half of the
root system when the rest of the root was deprived of
NO3
for 24 h.
 |
"OME"-OPHOBIA? |
Although the impact of genomic sequencing projects on
NO3
assimilation research
permeated the whole meeting, there was a marked scarcity of talks
describing the application of downstream "-omic" technologies. One
notable exception was the presentation of Lejay (New York University,
New York) who reported progress toward a systems approach to
understanding C:N signaling in Arabidopsis using transcriptomics. She
also described the development of a powerful bioinformatics tool called
"PathExplore" that can be used to query microarray data to
determine how genes common to particular metabolic pathways are
regulated. Valuable input for such an analysis is likely to come from
microarray experiments such as those reported by Boivin (Institut
National de la Recherche Agronomique, d'Evry, France) in which the
responses of the transcriptome to N starvation and resupply are being
analyzed. Metabolomics are being used to try to understand
the phenotype of a plant mutant defective in the plastidic form of Gln
synthase (Marquez, University of Seville).
Transcription profiling was not the only "whole genome" technique
discussed in the context of uncovering N regulatory circuits. Hirel
(Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Versailles, France) and
Yamaya (Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan) are using quantitative
trait loci mapping in maize (Zea mays) and rice (Oryza sativa), respectively, to identify genetic determinants of
N-use efficiency. Hirel pointed out the potential that this approach holds for identifying the master regulatory genes that
orchestrate the plant's responses to changing N nutrition.
 |
CONCLUDING REMARKS |
This latest meeting in the NAMGA series reminded us yet again how
valuable it can be to exchange ideas, approaches, and results across
the great divide that so often keeps plant biologists apart from their
colleagues working on analogous problems in other kingdoms. Clear
homologies exist between the proteins that catalyze the NO3
assimilatory pathways in
the different kingdoms. This gives ample scope for plant biologists to
benefit from the structural and functional insights emerging from the
more amenable microbial systems. It is curious that the nuts and bolts
of NO3
regulation seem not to
have been similarly conserved across the kingdoms. Did the mechanisms
for NO3
induction and feedback
repression of the pathway evolve independently in bacteria, fungi, and
plants? Until we know more about how plant NO3
assimilation is regulated,
we cannot be sure. However, with the rapid advances now possible in the
postgenomics era, it seems safe to predict that by the time NAMGA2006
comes around, at least some of the key factors that regulate
NO3
assimilation in plants
will have been identified. The comparisons that can then be made
between NO3
regulatory
circuits in diverse phylogenetic groups will no doubt contribute to
another fruitful and memorable meeting in the NAMGA series.