Moisture effects on microbial protein biosynthesis from ammonium and nitrate in an unfertilised grassland

Reay, M. K., Loick, Nadine, Evershed, R. P., Muller, C. and Cardenas, LauraORCID logo (2023) Moisture effects on microbial protein biosynthesis from ammonium and nitrate in an unfertilised grassland. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 184. p. 109114. 10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.109114
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Incorporation of nitrogen (N) into soil microbial protein is central to the soil N cycle to mitigate N losses and support plant N supply. However, the effect of factors, such as water filled pore space (WFPS), which influence inorganic N transformations and losses, and thus microbial incorporation, are only poorly understood. This work aimed to bridge this gap, using compound-specific 15N-stable isotope probing to quantify microbial assimilation into the largest defined soil organic N pool, protein-N. This approach applied differentially 15N-labelled ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) to an unfertilised UK grassland in a soil mesocosm study over 10 days. The soil microbial community showed a strong preference for NH4+ over NO3−, which varied with WFPS (85% > 55% >70%). This preference decreased for amino acids further in biosynthetic proximity to the transamination step in amino acid biosynthesis. Combined incorporation of NH4+ and NO3− increased total hydrolysable amino acid-N concentration linked to WFPS (55% ~ 85% > 70%). Incorporation rates of applied 15N showed the same trend as NH4+ preference with WFPS (85% > 55% > 70%), which is related to microbial activity and nutrient mobility. Despite differences in incorporation, when normalised to soil available N, incorporation was comparable in the short-term. Mechanistic control of WFPS via assimilation into the largest soil organic N pool is important to mitigate potential positive feedbacks to N losses and support N supply to plants.


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