Abstract

Different organs of maize seedlings are known to contain different complements of NADH and NAD(P)H nitrate reductase (NR) activity. The study of the genetic programming that gives rise to such differences can be initiated by looking for genetic variants exhibiting different patterns of distribution of the above enzymes. We demonstrate in this work that scutella of very young maize seedlings contain NADH NR almost exclusively and that this activity is gradually replaced, as the seedling ages, with NAD(P)H NR. Leaves in the seedlings contain exclusively the NADH NR activity. A genetic variant is described that contains much reduced levels of NAD(P)H NR activity but not of NADH NR activity in the scutellum. This same variant exhibits a relatively low level of NAD(P)H NR but normal NADH NR activity in seedling root tips. These observations suggest that the genetic program used to specify the scutellar complement of NR activity shares some common components with the genetic program used to determine the young root tip complement of NR activities. Parts of regenerating callus at different stages of differentiation were examined to determine when the differences in NR complement begin to appear. The same pattern of NADH NR and NAD(P)H NR activities was found in unorganized as well as in organized callus, in recognizable root-like and even in green shoot-like material, both activities being present in all these tissues. An examination of the NR complement in different organs of a number of siblings originating from a cross involving transposon Mu-containing parents and having different levels of leaf NADH NR activity shows that the leaf NADH NR activity content and the scutellum NAD(P)H NR activity content are relatively independent of each other, indicating that the genetic programs specifying the NR content of these organs are not tightly coupled, if at all.

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