Nitrate Uptake and Partitioning by Corn Root Systems

Abstract
The relative effects of ammonium on nitrate uptake and partitioning during induction were compared among decapitated seedlings of 3 corn genotypes at 2 developmental stages. The hypothesis that root systems efficient at translocating products of ammonium assimilation away from sites of nitrate uptake or reduction would exhibit less inhibition of nitrate uptake by ammonium compared to root systems with inefficient N translocation efficiency was tested. Inhibition of nitrate uptake by ammonium was relatively slight at day 5 ranging from 0% to 20% among the 3 genotypes, as compared to greater inhibition, from 20-37%, at day 8. Five-day-old roots exhibited negligible xylem translocation capacity in comparison with those grown for 8 days. Although the capability to translocate ammonium assimilates out of the root increased between days 5 and 8, inhibitory effects of ammonium also increased. In the absence of ammonium nitrate uptake per unit root mass increased between days 5 and 8. This increased activity of the uptake system was propotionally more sensitive to ammonium. Partitioning of entering nitrate into the reduction process was positively correlated with lateral root development of the inbred root systems at 5 and 8 days. This is supportive of a localization of a major portion of nitrate reduction occuring in root apical regions. Nitrate reduction was the partitioning process most severely inhibited by ammonium in all cases, ranging from 39-55% inhibition. Ammonium inhibition of nitrate accumulation in the root tissue and translocation via xylem vessels varied with genotype and root age. Two mechanisms of ammonium-inhibition of nitrate are implicated, one which directly affects nitrate reduction and the uptake system associated with it, and another which may involve K as an intermediate regulator of nitrate accumulation in the root tissue and nitrate translocation out of the root tissue.