Abstract

Glutamine, in the presence of alpha-oxoglutarate, stimulates nicotinamide nucleotide oxidation by crude extracts of pea roots and leads to a reductant-dependent formation of glutamate. Commercially available asparagine also stimulates nicotinamide nucleotide oxidation in the presence of alpha-oxoglutarate, but the reaction causing the stimulation can occur in the absence of a reductant, is inhibited by transaminase inhibitors, and is additive to the glutamine reaction. The asparagine used was found to be contaminated with aspartate. Repurified asparagine, chromatographically free of aspartate, did not stimulate the rate of nicotinamide nucleotide oxidation, and it is probable that the original stimulation was due to aspartate contamination. It is concluded that pea-root glutamine (amide)-alpha-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (glutamate synthase), in common with the enzyme in leaves, is specific for glutamine as the N donor and alpha-oxoglutarate as the N acceptor. The significance of the enzyme in conjunction with glutamine synthetase in the assimilation of nitrate by roots is discussed.

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