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Inorganic Nitrogen in Plants and Microorganisms summarizes new
experimental data, ideas and conclusions on the whole metabolic
spectrum: - transport through the cell membranes, - the
distribution within plant organs, - nitrate and nitrite reduction
with their complicated genetic and physiological regulation, - the
assimilation of ammonium and dinitrogen. Short reviews cover the
dissimilatory reduction of the various inorganic nitrogen
intermediates by bacteria, genetic regulation, and ecological and
environmental problems. Inorganic Nitrogen in Plants and
Microorganisms will help readers understand recent developments in
the field of inorganic nitrogen uptake and metabolism.
At a meeting of the Federation of European Societies of Plant
Physiology in 1984 in Strasbourg the idea of having a special
meeting on inorganic nitrogen metabolism on a more or less European
level was born. Originally it was planned to limit its content to
the inorganic nitrogen metabolism of eukary otic algae and
cyanobacteria, but later the Organizing Committee decided to widen
the scope of the meeting. Thus, what resulted was a Symposium, or
rather an Advanced Course, on Inorganic Nitrogen Metabolism,
including, in addition to algal biochemistry and physiology, some
coverage of nitrogen fIxing bacteria, a large area that could only
be touched on during the course and in which newer ideas from
molecular biology are much involved, and, to some extent, of the
biochemistry and physiology of fungi and higher plants. Not all of
the speakers originally invited could come and contribute, but the
Table of Contents shows that the meeting was able to survey
reasonably adequately, the present state of research on nitrogen
assimilation by plants. The speakers were asked to present recent
results from their laboratories in the context of a survey of
background knowledge, thus the articles in this volume sometimes
partially overlap, but never so much that there is not an
interesting and complementary approach to the same problem from
several sides. Therefore, the editors decided not to interfere with
the texts of the authors and to risk some repetition; e. g."
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