Abstract

Nitrate and light are known to modulate barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) nitrate reductase activity. The objective of this investigation was to determine whether barley nitrate reductase is regulated by enzyme synthesis and degradation or by an activation-inactivation mechanism. Barley seedling nitrate reductase protein (cross-reacting material) was determined by rocket immunoelectrophoresis and a qualitative immunochemical technique (western blot) during the induction and decay of nitrate reductase activity. Nitrate reductase cross-reacting material was not detected in root or shoot extracts from seedlings grown without nitrate. Low levels of nitrate reductase activity and cross-reacting material were observed in leaf extracts from plants grown on nitrate in the dark. Upon nitrate induction or transfer of nitrate-grown etiolated plants to the light, increases in nitrate reductase activity were positively correlated with increases in immunological cross-reactivity. Root and shoot nitrate reductase activity and cross-reacting material decreased when nitrate-induced seedlings were transferred to a nitrate-free nutrient solution or from light to darkness. These results indicate that barley nitrate reductase levels are regulated by de novo synthesis and protein degradation.

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