Abstract

Nitrogen (N) is an essential plant growth nutrient whose coordinated distribution from source to sink organs is crucial for seed development and overall crop yield. We compared high and low N use efficiency (NUE) Brassica napus (rapeseed) genotypes. Metabonomics and transcriptomics revealed that leaf senescence induced by N deficiency promoted amino acid allocation from older to younger leaves in the high-NUE genotype at the vegetative growth stage. Efficient source to sink remobilization of amino acids elevated the numbers of branches and pods per plant under a N-deficiency treatment during the reproductive stage. A 15N tracer experiment confirmed that more amino acids were partitioned into seeds from the silique wall during the pod stage in the high-NUE genotype, owing mainly to variation in genes involved in organic N transport and metabolism. We suggest that the greater amino acid source-to-sink allocation efficiency during various growth stages in the high-NUE genotype resulted in higher yield and NUE under N deficiency. These findings support the hypothesis that strong amino acid remobilization in rapeseed leads to high yield, NUE, and harvest index.

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