All organisms require macromolecules (carbohydrates, proteins, fats
etc), water & minerals for growth and development.
METHODS
TO STUDY THE MINERAL REQUIREMENTS OF PLANTS
-
The technique of growing plants
in a defined nutrient solution (without soil) is known as hydroponics.
-
It is demonstrated by Julius von Sachs (German botanist,
1860).
-
The nutrient solutions must be
adequately aerated to obtain the optimum growth.
-
Hydroponics was used to identify
the essential elements required for plants and their deficiency symptoms. This
method requires purified water and mineral nutrient salts.
-
After a series of experiments, a
mineral solution suitable for the plant growth was obtained. In this, the roots
of the plants were immersed in nutrient solutions and wherein an element was
added / removed or given in varied concentration.
-
Hydroponics has been employed in
the commercial production of vegetables such as tomato, seedless cucumber and
lettuce.
ESSENTIAL MINERAL ELEMENTS
-
More than 60 elements are found
in different plants. Some plant species accumulate selenium, gold etc.
-
Some plants growing near nuclear
test sites take up radioactive strontium.
-
There are techniques to detect
the minerals even at a very low concentration (10-8 g/mL).
Criteria for Essentiality of an element
·
The element must be necessary for
normal growth and reproduction. In the absence of the element the plants do not
complete their life cycle or set the seeds.
·
The requirement of the element
must be specific. i.e., Deficiency of an element cannot be met by supplying
another element.
·
It must be directly involved in the plant
metabolism.
Only 17
elements are absolutely essential for plant growth and metabolism.
Based on
quantitative requirements these elements are divided into two types:
Macronutrients & Micronutrients.
i. Macronutrients
-
They are present in plant tissues
in large amounts (more than 10 mmole Kg–1 of dry matter).
-
They include carbon, hydrogen,
oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorous, sulphur, potassium, calcium & magnesium.
-
Of these, carbon, hydrogen &
oxygen are mainly obtained from CO2 and H2O. Others
are absorbed from the soil as mineral nutrition.
ii. Micronutrients
(trace elements)
-
They are needed in very small
amounts (less than 10 mmole Kg–1 of dry matter).
-
They include iron, manganese,
copper, molybdenum, zinc, boron, chlorine and nickel.
For
higher plants, there are some other elements required such as sodium, silicon,
cobalt & selenium.
Essential
elements are also grouped into four categories on the basis of their functions.
They are:
(i)
Components of biomolecules and
structural elements of cells. E.g. carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen.
(ii)
Components of energy-related
chemical compounds. E.g. Mg in chlorophyll and phosphorous in ATP.
(iii)
Essential elements that activate
or inhibit enzymes. E.g. Mg2+ is an activator for RUBISCO and phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase. They
are critical enzymes in photosynthetic carbon fixation. Zn2+ is an activator of alcohol
dehydrogenase and Mo of nitrogenase during nitrogen metabolism.
(iv)
Essential elements that alter the
osmotic potential of a cell. E.g. Potassium functions in the opening and
closing of stomata.
Role of Macro- and Micro-nutrients
Essential elements participate in various metabolic processes in the
plant cells such as
·
Permeability of cell membrane
·
Maintenance of osmotic concentration of cell sap
·
Electron transport systems
·
Buffering action
·
Enzymatic activity
·
Major constituents of macromolecules and
co-enzymes.
Functions
of various mineral elements are given below.
Nitrogen:
·
This is required by plants in the greatest amount.
·
It is required by all plant
parts, particularly the meristematic tissues and the metabolically active
cells.
·
It is absorbed mainly as NO3– though
some are also taken up as NO2– or NH4+.
·
It is the major constituents of
amino acids, proteins, nucleic acids, chlorophyll, vitamins and hormones.
Phosphorus:
·
It is absorbed by the plants from
soil in the form of phosphate ions (either as H2PO4− or HPO42−).
·
It is a constituent of cell
membranes, certain proteins, all nucleic acids and nucleotides.
·
It is required for all phosphorylation reactions.
Potassium:
·
It is absorbed as potassium ion (K+).
·
It is required in abundant
quantities in the meristematic tissues, buds, leaves and root tips.
·
It maintains an anion-cation balance in cells.
·
It is involved in protein
synthesis, opening and closing of stomata, activation of enzymes and in the
maintenance of the turgidity of cells.
Calcium:
·
It is absorbed from the soil as calcium ions (Ca2+).
·
It is required by meristematic
and differentiating tissues.
·
During cell division, it is used
in the synthesis of cell wall, particularly as calcium pectate in middle
lamella. It is also needed during the formation of mitotic spindle.
·
It accumulates in older leaves.
·
It is involved in the normal
functioning of the cell membranes.
·
It activates certain enzymes and
plays an important role in regulating metabolic activities.
Magnesium:
·
It is absorbed by plants in the form of divalent Mg2+.
·
It activates enzymes of
respiration & photosynthesis.
·
It is involved in the synthesis of DNA and RNA.
·
It is a constituent of the ring structure of
chlorophyll.
·
It helps to maintain the ribosome structure.
Sulphur:
·
Plants obtain sulphur in the form of sulphate (SO)42−.
·
It is present in 2 amino acids
(cysteine & methionine).
·
It is the constituent of several
coenzymes, vitamins (thiamine, biotin, Coenzyme A) and ferredoxin.
Iron:
·
Plants obtain iron in the form of ferric ions (Fe3+).
·
It is required in larger amounts
in comparison to other micronutrients.
·
It is a main constituent of
proteins involved in the transfer of electrons like ferredoxin and cytochromes.
·
It is reversibly oxidized from Fe2+ to Fe3+ during electron transfer.
·
It activates catalase enzyme, and
is essential for the formation of chlorophyll.
Manganese:
·
It is absorbed in the form of manganous ions (Mn2+).
·
It activates many enzymes
involved in photosynthesis, respiration and nitrogen metabolism.
·
The best defined function of
manganese is in the splitting of water to liberate O2 during photosynthesis.
Zinc:
·
Plants obtain zinc as Zn2+ ions.
·
It activates various enzymes,
especially carboxylases.
·
It is also needed in the synthesis of auxin.
Copper:
·
It is absorbed as cupric ions (Cu2+).
·
It is essential for the overall
metabolism in plants.
·
Like iron, it is associated with
some enzymes in redox reactions and is reversibly oxidised from Cu+ to Cu2+.
Boron:
· It is
absorbed as BO3 3− or B4O72−.
·
It is required for uptake and
utilisation of Ca2+, membrane functioning, pollen germination, cell elongation, cell
differentiation and carbohydrate translocation.
Molybdenum:
· Plants obtain it in the form of molybdate ions
(MoO)22+.
·
It is a component of several
enzymes, including nitrogenase and nitrate reductase. These enzymes participate
in nitrogen metabolism.
Chlorine:
·
It is absorbed in the form of chloride anion (Cl–).
·
Along with Na+ & K+, it helps in determining the
solute concentration and the anion-cation balance in cells.
·
It is essential for the
water-splitting reaction in photosynthesis that leads to oxygen evolution.
Deficiency
Symptoms of Essential Elements
-
When the supply of an essential
element becomes limited, plant growth is retarded.
-
The concentration of the
essential element below which plant growth is retarded is termed as critical concentration. The element is said to be deficient when present below the critical
concentration.
-
Due to the deficiency or absence
of particular element, the plant shows some morphological changes. It is called
deficiency symptoms.
-
The deficiency symptoms vary from
element to element and they disappear when the deficient mineral nutrient is
provided to the plant. If deprivation continues, it may lead to the death of
the plant.
-
The parts of the plants that show
the deficiency symptoms depend on the mobility of the element. For elements
that are actively mobilized and exported to young developing tissues, the
deficiency symptoms appear first in the older tissues. E.g. deficiency symptoms
of nitrogen, potassium and magnesium are visible first in the senescent leaves.
-
In older leaves, biomolecules
containing these elements are broken down. It makes these elements available
for mobilizing to younger leaves.
-
If the elements are relatively
immobile and are not transported out of the mature organs, the deficiency
symptoms appear first in the young tissues. E.g. elements like S and Ca are a
part of the structural component of the cell and hence are not easily released.
-
This aspect of mineral nutrition
is of a great significance and importance to agriculture and horticulture.
-
The deficiency symptoms include
chlorosis, necrosis, stunted growth, premature fall of leaves & buds and
inhibition of cell division.
-
Chlorosis is the loss of chlorophyll
leading to yellowing in leaves. It
is due to the deficiency of elements N, K, Mg, S, Fe, Mn, Zn and Mo.
-
Necrosis is the death of tissue,
particularly leaf tissue. It is due
to the deficiency of Ca, Mg, Cu, K.
- Lack or low level of N, K, S, Mo causes an inhibition of cell division.
Low concentration of some elements like N, S, Mo delay flowering.
- Deficiency of an element causes multiple symptoms. The same symptoms may
be caused by the deficiency of other elements. Hence, to identify the deficient
element, it has to study all the symptoms developed in all parts of the plant.
We must also be aware that different plants respond differently to the
deficiency of the same element.
Toxicity
of Micronutrients
- A
moderate increase in micronutrients causes toxicity.
- Any mineral ion concentration in tissues that reduces the dry weight of
tissues by about 10% is considered toxic.
Such critical concentrations vary widely among different micronutrients.
-
The toxicity symptoms are
difficult to identify. Toxicity levels for an element also vary for different
plants.
-
Excess of an element may inhibit
the uptake of another element. E.g. Excess of Mn induces deficiencies of Fe, Mg
& Ca because it competes with Fe & Mg for uptake and with Mg for
binding with enzymes. Mn also inhibits Ca translocation in shoot apex. Thus
symptoms of Mn toxicity may actually be the deficiency symptoms of Fe, Mg &
Ca. Main symptom of manganese toxicity is the appearance of brown spots
surrounded by chlorotic veins.
MECHANISM
OF ABSORPTION OF ELEMENTS
- The
process of absorption includes 2 main phases.
o First phase: Initial rapid and passive uptake of ions
into the ‘free space’ or ‘outer space’ of cells
(apoplast). It usually occurs through ion-channels, the trans-membrane proteins
that function as selective pores.
o Second phase: The ions are taken in slowly into the
‘inner space’ of the cells (symplast). It is an
active process (requires metabolic energy).
-
The inward movement of ions into
the cells is called influx and the outward movement is efflux.
Translocation
of solutes
-
Mineral salts are translocated
through xylem along with the ascending stream of water.
-
Analysis of xylem sap shows the
presence of mineral salts in it. Use of radioisotopes of mineral elements also
proved that they are transported through the xylem.
SOIL
AS RESERVOIR OF ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS
- Weathering and breakdown of rocks enrich the soil with dissolved ions
and inorganic salts.
- Roles of soil:
o It supplies minerals and holds water.
o It harbours nitrogen-fixing
bacteria and other microbes. o It supplies air to the roots.
o It acts as a matrix that stabilizes the plant.
-
Deficiency of essential minerals
affects the crop-yield. So fertilizers should be supplied. Both macro-nutrients
and micro-nutrients form components of fertilizers.
METABOLISM OF NITROGEN
Nitrogen
Cycle
-
Nitrogen
is the most prevalent element in living organisms.
- Plants compete with microbes for the limited nitrogen in soil. Thus,
nitrogen is a limiting nutrient for both natural and agricultural eco-systems.
- The process of conversion of nitrogen (N2 or NºN) to
ammonia is termed as nitrogen fixation.
- In nature, lightning and UV radiation provide energy to convert nitrogen
to nitrogen oxides (NO, NO2, N2O). Industrial combustions, forest fires, automobile exhausts and
power-generating stations are also sources of atmospheric nitrogen oxides.
- Decomposition of organic nitrogen of dead plants and animals into
ammonia is called ammonification.
- Some of this ammonia volatilizes and re-enters the atmosphere but most
of it is converted into nitrate by soil
bacteria
in the following steps:
2NH3 + 3O2 → 2NO2- + 2H+ + 2H2O
2NO2- + O2 → 2NO3-
- NH3 is oxidized to nitrite by the bacteria Nitrosomonas & Nitrococcus.
Nitrite is oxidized to nitrate by a bacterium
Nitrobacter. These steps are called nitrification. These nitrifying bacteria are chemo-autotrophs.
-
The nitrate is absorbed by plants
and is transported to the leaves. In leaves, it is reduced to form ammonia that
finally forms the amine group of amino acids.
-
Biological
Nitrogen Fixation
- It is the reduction of N2 to NH3 by living organisms in presence of nitrogenase enzyme.
- Very few living organisms can utilize the nitrogen in the form N2, available in the air.
- Only certain prokaryotic species are capable of fixing N2.
- Nitrogenase is present exclusively in prokaryotes. Such microbes are
called N2- fixers.
- Nitrogen-fixing
microbes are 2 types:
o Free-living: E.g.
Azotobacter
&
Beijernickia
(aerobic
microbes), Rhodospirillum & Bacillus
(anaerobic), cyanobacteria such as Anabaena
& Nostoc.
o Symbiotic: E.g. Rhizobium.
Symbiotic Biological Nitrogen Fixation
- The most prominent symbiotic biological nitrogen fixing associations is
the legume-bacteria relationship.
E.g. Rhizobium species (rod-shaped)
seen in the roots of legumes such as
alfalfa, sweet clover, sweet pea, lentils, garden pea, broad bean, clover beans
etc.
- The most
common association on roots is as nodules.
- The
microbe, Frankia also produces N2 fixing
nodules on the roots of non-leguminous plants (e.g. Alnus).
- Rhizobium & Frankia are free-living
in soil, but as symbionts, can fix
atmospheric nitrogen.
- The section of a nodule shows red or pink colour in the central portion.
This is due to the presence of leguminous haemoglobin or leg-haemoglobin.
Principal stages in the Nodule formation:
o Rhizobia multiply and colonise the
surroundings of the
roots and
get attached to epidermal and root hair cells.
o Root-hairs
curl and the bacteria invade the root-hair.
o An infection thread is produced carrying the bacteria into root cortex,
where they initiate nodule formation.
o The bacteria are released from thread into cells.
It leads to differentiation of specialized nitrogen fixing cells.
o The nodule thus formed,
establishes a direct vascular connection with the host for exchange of nutrients.
-
The
nodule contains all essential biochemical components, such as nitrogenase
enzyme & leg-haemoglobin.
Nitrogenase
(a Mo-Fe protein) catalyzes the conversion of
atmospheric nitrogen to NH3, the first stable product
of N2 fixation (Fig.12.5 in T.B). The reaction is as
follows:
Nitrogenase is highly sensitive
to the molecular oxygen. So it requires anaerobic conditions to protect from
oxygen. For this, the nodule contains an oxygen scavenger called leg-haemoglobin.
-
These microbes live as aerobes
under free-living conditions (where nitrogenase is not operational), but during
nitrogen-fixing events, they become anaerobic (to protect nitrogenase enzyme).
-
The ammonia synthesis by
nitrogenase requires a very high input energy (8 ATP for each NH3 produced). It is obtained from
the respiration of the host cells.
Fate of ammonia:
-
At physiological pH, the NH3 is protonated to form NH4+ (ammonium) ion. While most of the plants can assimilate nitrate as well
as ammonium ions, the latter is quite toxic to plants and hence cannot
accumulate in them.
-
In plants, NH4+ is used to synthesize amino acids by two ways:
a.
Reductive amination: In these
processes, ammonia reacts with a-ketoglutaric acid to form glutamic acid.
a- ketoglutaric acid + NH4+ + NADPHGlutamate dehydrogenase
Glutamate + H2O + NADP
b. Transamination: It involves the transfer of amino group from one amino acid to the keto
group of a keto acid. Glutamic acid is the main amino acid from which the
transfer of NH2, (amino group) takes place and other amino acids are formed through
transamination. The
enzyme transaminase catalyses all
such reactions. For example:
-
Asparagine & glutamine are
two most important amides found in plants. They are structural part of
proteins. They are formed from 2 amino acids- aspartic acid & glutamic
acid- by addition of another amino group to each. The hydroxyl part of
the acid is replaced by another NH2- radical.
-
Since amides contain more
nitrogen than the amino acids, they are transported to other parts of the plant
via xylem vessels. In addition, along with the transpiration stream the nodules
of some plants (e.g. soyabean) export the fixed nitrogen as ureides. These
compounds also have particularly high nitrogen to carbon ratio.
No comments:
Post a Comment