NITROGEN METABOLISM
Role of Nitrogen in Plants :– Constituent of proteins, nucleic acids ATP, GTP, Chitin, Vitamins, chlorophyll, alkaloids, cytochromes, hormones. Nitrogen is necessary to plants for heridity, reproduction, growth metabolism and development.
Sources of Nitrogen to plants
:(1) Atmospheric nitrogen : N ≡ N (Molecular, inert or elemental form) used by Rhizobium(Legumes), BGA, Lichens, Yeast, Pullularia.
These converts atm. N2 into metabolically usefull ammonaium ions (NH4+). This process is called as biological nitrogen fixation.
(2) NO3–, NO2–, NH4+ in soil : These are major source of nitrogen to plants.
Nitrate ions (NO3–) are cheif form of nitrogen used by majority of plants.
Plants grow in acidic soil & found in forest use ammonium ions (NH4+) as major N2 source.
Nitrate ions are cheif source of N2 for plants but they can not be used directly in metabolic pathway in plant cells, as it is highly oxidised form. so NO3– (Nitrate) first converted into NH4+ (ammonium ions) called nitrate reduction. So NH4+ ions enters in plant metabolism.
(3) Organic nitrogen in soil : as amino acids, protein body.
Due to death & decay of organisms. This is not a major source of N2.
(4) Insect bodies : for some plants (insectivorous plants)
(5) Urea as chemical/artificial fertilizers
Nitrogen (N2) Cycle :
(1) Biological Nitrogen Fixation / Diazotrophy (N2 → NH3) :– Conversion of molecular or elemental nitrogen ( N≡N) into inorganic nitrogenous compounds (NH4+) through agency of living organisms is called asbiological nitrogen fixation or Diazotrophy
Nitrogen Fixing organisms (Diazotrophs) :–
(A) Free living organisms or non–symbiotic organisms/bacteria :– Azotobacter, Aerobacter, Beijerinckia, Heliobacterium (Clostridium, Rhodospirillum, Chromatium, Chlorobium, Rhodopseudomonas .
Cyanobacteria (Blue = green algae) – Nostoc, Anabaena, Caulothrix, Cylindriospermum, Tolypothrix, Aulosira etc.
(B) Symbiotic Nitrogen fixers :–
Rhizobium leguminosarum (= Bacillus radicicola) is association with the root nodules of leguminous plants. None of these two partners alone can fix atm. nitrogen.
(i) Root nodules of non–legume (15–genera) Angiosperms :– Casuorina, Myrica, Alnus, Ceanothus, Elaiagnus, Hippophae, Coriaria.
Filamentous, Actinomycetous bacteria Frankia live in root nodules of these non-legume plants.
Both Rhizobium & Frankia live freely in soil but fix nitrogen only when in symbiotic association with host plant.
(ii) Root nodules of gymnosperms :– Cycadaceae, Podocarpus.
(iii) Leaf Nodules (Phyllosphere) :– Psychotria, Dioscoria (Klebsiella), Rubiaceae (Mycobacteria) .
(iv) Lichens :– Cyanobacteria (BGA) partner
(v) Non nodule forming associations : Between Azolla (aquatic fern) & Cyanobacteria Anabaena.
(vi) Paspalum-notatum grass have loose symbiosis (associative symbiosis) with Azotobacter pospali in roots and Azospirillum with wheat, maize, sorghum etc.
(2) Ammonification : Conversion of dead organic nitrogenous compounds into ammonia. Bacillus mycoides, B. ramosus.
(3) Nitrification : Oxidation of ammonia, produced by ammonification into nitrates by nitrifying bacteria is called asnitrification.
(4) Denitrification : Nitrates or nitrites converts back into molecular or atm. nitrogen by denitrifying bacteria is denitrification. Ex. Pseudomonas
(5) Nitrate reduction :
Plants take nitrogen from soil, chiefly in nitrate forms which is highly oxidised form.
Nitrate reductase is Molybdo flavoprotein isolated by Evans and Nason 1953 from Neurospora and Glycin max leaves.
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