Enhanced photorespiratory and TCA pathways by elevated CO2 to manage ammonium nutrition in tomato leaves

Plants grown under exclusive ammonium (NH4+) nutrition have high carbon (C) demand to sustain proper nitrogen (N) assimilation and energy required for plant growth, generally impaired when compared to nitrate (NO3−) nutrition. Thereby, the increment of the atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant physiology and biochemistry 2024-12, Vol.217, p.109216, Article 109216
Hauptverfasser: Vega-Mas, Izargi, Marino, Daniel, De la Peña, Marlon, Fuertes-Mendizábal, Teresa, González-Murua, Carmen, Estavillo, José María, González-Moro, María Begoña
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Plants grown under exclusive ammonium (NH4+) nutrition have high carbon (C) demand to sustain proper nitrogen (N) assimilation and energy required for plant growth, generally impaired when compared to nitrate (NO3−) nutrition. Thereby, the increment of the atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration, in the context of climate change, will potentially allow plants to better face ammonium nutrition. In this work, tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) plants were grown under ammonium or nitrate nutrition in conditions of ambient (aCO2, 400 ppm) or elevated CO2 (eCO2, 800 ppm) atmosphere. Elevated CO2 increased photosynthesis rate and tomato shoot growth regardless of the N source. In the case of NH4+-fed leaves the positive effect of elevated CO2 occurred despite of the high tissue NH4+ accumulation. Under eCO2 ammonium nutrition triggered, among others, the modulation of genes related to C provision pathways (including carbonic anhydrase and glyoxylate cycle), antioxidant response and cell membranes protection. The enhanced photosynthate production at eCO2 facilitated C skeleton provision through the TCA cycle and anaplerotic pathways to promote amino acid synthesis. Moreover, photorespiratory activity was stimulated by eCO2 and contributed to yield serine as additional sink for NH4+ excess. Overall, these changes denote a connection between the respiratory and the photorespiratory pathways linked to ammonium nutrition. This metabolic strategy may allow crops to grow efficiently using ammonium as fertilizer in a future climate change scenario, while mitigating N losses. [Display omitted] •Elevated CO2 benefits shoot growth regardless N nutrition form and ammonium uptake.•Ammonium nutrition modulates C provision, cell wall and antioxidant defence at eCO2.•TCA cycle increases C skeleton supply for amino acid synthesis in ammonium-plants.•Stimulated respiratory and photorespiratory pathways are linked in ammonium stress.•Photorespiratory serine accumulated at eCO2 acts as extra sink for ammonium-plants.
ISSN:0981-9428
1873-2690
1873-2690
DOI:10.1016/j.plaphy.2024.109216