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Ammonia Assimilation in Alnus glutinosa and Glycine max

SHORT-TERM STUDIES USING [13N]AMMONIUM

Karel R. Schubert, George T. Coker, Richard B. Firestone
Karel R. Schubert
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George T. Coker III
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Richard B. Firestone
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Published April 1981. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.67.4.662

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  • © 1981 American Society of Plant Biologists

Abstract

The pattern of assimilation of NH4+ by Alnus glutinosa, a N2-fixing, nonleguminous angiosperm, was examined. Detached nodules, roots, and nodulated roots of intact plants were exposed to 13NH4+ for up to 15 minutes. Glutamine was the most highly labeled compound at all times; the only other compound labeled significantly was glutamate. Similar results were obtained after incubating soybean (L. merr) nodules and roots with 13NH4+. These observations and the results of pulse-labeling and inhibitor studies with nodules of Alnus were distinctly different from those predicted for the assimilation of NH4+ via glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase and suggest that glutamate dehydrogenase may play a major role in the assimilation of exogenously supplied NH4+.

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Ammonia Assimilation in Alnus glutinosa and Glycine max
Karel R. Schubert, George T. Coker, Richard B. Firestone
Plant Physiology Apr 1981, 67 (4) 662-665; DOI: 10.1104/pp.67.4.662

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Ammonia Assimilation in Alnus glutinosa and Glycine max
Karel R. Schubert, George T. Coker, Richard B. Firestone
Plant Physiology Apr 1981, 67 (4) 662-665; DOI: 10.1104/pp.67.4.662
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Plant Physiology
Vol. 67, Issue 4
April 1981
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