He, Bing

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  • He, Bing (2)
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Author's Bibliography

Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses

Akhtar, Kashif; ul Ain, Noor; Prasad, P. V. Vara; Naz, Misbah; Aslam, Mehtab Muhammad; Đalović, Ivica; Riaz, Muhammad; Ahmad, Shakeel; Varshney, Rajeev K.; He, Bing; Wen, Ronghui

(Wiley Periodicals LLC, 2024)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Akhtar, Kashif
AU  - ul Ain, Noor
AU  - Prasad, P. V. Vara
AU  - Naz, Misbah
AU  - Aslam, Mehtab Muhammad
AU  - Đalović, Ivica
AU  - Riaz, Muhammad
AU  - Ahmad, Shakeel
AU  - Varshney, Rajeev K.
AU  - He, Bing
AU  - Wen, Ronghui
PY  - 2024
UR  - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/4650
AB  - Nitrogen (N) as an inorganic macronutrient is inevitable for plant growth, development, and biomass production. Many external factors and stresses, such as acidity, alkalinity, salinity, temperature, oxygen, and rainfall, affect N uptake and metabolism in plants. The uptake of ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3−) in plants mainly depends on soil properties. Under the sufficient availability of NO3− (>1 mM), low-affinity transport system is activated by gene network NRT1, and under low NO3− availability (<1 mM), high-affinity transport system starts functioning encoded by NRT2 family of genes. Further, under limited N supply due to edaphic and climatic factors, higher expression of the AtNRT2.4 and AtNRT2.5T genes of the NRT2 family occur and are considered as N remobilizing genes. The NH4+ ion is the final form of N assimilated by cells mediated through the key enzymes glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. The WRKY1 is a major transcription factor of the N regulation network in plants. However, the transcriptome and metabolite profiles show variations in N assimilation metabolites, including glycine, glutamine, and aspartate, under abiotic stresses. The overexpression of NO3− transporters (OsNRT2.3a and OsNRT1.1b) can significantly improve the biomass and yield of various crops. Altering the expression levels of genes could be a valuable tool to improve N metabolism under the challenging conditions of soil and environment, such as unfavorable temperature, drought, salinity, heavy metals, and nutrient stress.
PB  - Wiley Periodicals LLC
PB  - Crop Science Society of America
T2  - The Plant Genome
T1  - Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses
SP  - e20461
DO  - 10.1002/tpg2.20461
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Akhtar, Kashif and ul Ain, Noor and Prasad, P. V. Vara and Naz, Misbah and Aslam, Mehtab Muhammad and Đalović, Ivica and Riaz, Muhammad and Ahmad, Shakeel and Varshney, Rajeev K. and He, Bing and Wen, Ronghui",
year = "2024",
abstract = "Nitrogen (N) as an inorganic macronutrient is inevitable for plant growth, development, and biomass production. Many external factors and stresses, such as acidity, alkalinity, salinity, temperature, oxygen, and rainfall, affect N uptake and metabolism in plants. The uptake of ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3−) in plants mainly depends on soil properties. Under the sufficient availability of NO3− (>1 mM), low-affinity transport system is activated by gene network NRT1, and under low NO3− availability (<1 mM), high-affinity transport system starts functioning encoded by NRT2 family of genes. Further, under limited N supply due to edaphic and climatic factors, higher expression of the AtNRT2.4 and AtNRT2.5T genes of the NRT2 family occur and are considered as N remobilizing genes. The NH4+ ion is the final form of N assimilated by cells mediated through the key enzymes glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. The WRKY1 is a major transcription factor of the N regulation network in plants. However, the transcriptome and metabolite profiles show variations in N assimilation metabolites, including glycine, glutamine, and aspartate, under abiotic stresses. The overexpression of NO3− transporters (OsNRT2.3a and OsNRT1.1b) can significantly improve the biomass and yield of various crops. Altering the expression levels of genes could be a valuable tool to improve N metabolism under the challenging conditions of soil and environment, such as unfavorable temperature, drought, salinity, heavy metals, and nutrient stress.",
publisher = "Wiley Periodicals LLC, Crop Science Society of America",
journal = "The Plant Genome",
title = "Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses",
pages = "e20461",
doi = "10.1002/tpg2.20461"
}
Akhtar, K., ul Ain, N., Prasad, P. V. V., Naz, M., Aslam, M. M., Đalović, I., Riaz, M., Ahmad, S., Varshney, R. K., He, B.,& Wen, R.. (2024). Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses. in The Plant Genome
Wiley Periodicals LLC., e20461.
https://doi.org/10.1002/tpg2.20461
Akhtar K, ul Ain N, Prasad PVV, Naz M, Aslam MM, Đalović I, Riaz M, Ahmad S, Varshney RK, He B, Wen R. Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses. in The Plant Genome. 2024;:e20461.
doi:10.1002/tpg2.20461 .
Akhtar, Kashif, ul Ain, Noor, Prasad, P. V. Vara, Naz, Misbah, Aslam, Mehtab Muhammad, Đalović, Ivica, Riaz, Muhammad, Ahmad, Shakeel, Varshney, Rajeev K., He, Bing, Wen, Ronghui, "Physiological, molecular, and environmental insights into plant nitrogen uptake, and metabolism under abiotic stresses" in The Plant Genome (2024):e20461,
https://doi.org/10.1002/tpg2.20461 . .

Straw mulch decreased N fertilizer requirements via regulating soil moisture and temperature to improve physiology, nitrogen and water use efficiency of wheat

Akhtar, Kashif; Ain, Noor Ul; Wang, Weiyu; Ren, Guangxin; Feng, Yongzhong; Đalović, Ivica; Prasad, Vara P.V.; Yang, Gaihe; He, Bing; Wen, Ronghui

(Crop Science Society of America, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Akhtar, Kashif
AU  - Ain, Noor Ul
AU  - Wang, Weiyu
AU  - Ren, Guangxin
AU  - Feng, Yongzhong
AU  - Đalović, Ivica
AU  - Prasad, Vara P.V.
AU  - Yang, Gaihe
AU  - He, Bing
AU  - Wen, Ronghui
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/3735
AB  - The infrequent rainfall caused drought prone condition particularly in semi-arid regions of China, where most of the precipitation occurs in summer season. Thus, the summer rainwater conservation is very important for winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) production. Therefore a 2-year field experiment was conducted on straw mulch along with N fertilizer to improve physiology, nitrogen use efficiency (NUE), wheat yield, and water use efficiency (WUE). Maize (Zea mays) was a rotated crop after wheat, and therefore maize straw mulch (S1, 0 kg ha−1; S2, 4500 kg ha−1; S3, 9000 kg ha−1) was in the main plots, and N fertilizer (N1, 0 kg ha−1; N2, 192 kg ha−1 (80%); N3, 240 kg ha−1 (100%)) was in the sub plots. The interaction of S3N3 and S3N2 produced 59.2% and 43.8% higher net photosynthesis and enhanced its characteristics at booting stage compared with that of S1N1. Higher SPAD values (49.1 and 41.0%) and leaf area (85.6 and 61.0%) measured with S3N3 and S3N2 treatments at booting stage compared with S1N1. Both S3N2 and S3N3 had increased wheat N-uptake (91 and 103%, respectively) compared to S1N1. While S3N3 and S3N2 enhanced soil moisture conservation, NUE (19.7 and 22.8%), and WUE (47.2 and 47.2%) with the improvement in the growth yield of wheat compared to S1N1. Higher 7604 kg ha−1 of wheat grain yield was obtained from interaction of S3N2. Therefore, interaction of S3N2 is a viable approach for improving the winter wheat crop performance in term of NUE, WUE and wheat yield for semiarid areas in China.
PB  - Crop Science Society of America
T2  - Agronomy Journal
T1  - Straw mulch decreased N fertilizer requirements via regulating soil moisture and temperature to improve physiology, nitrogen and water use efficiency of wheat
DO  - 10.1002/agj2.21437
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Akhtar, Kashif and Ain, Noor Ul and Wang, Weiyu and Ren, Guangxin and Feng, Yongzhong and Đalović, Ivica and Prasad, Vara P.V. and Yang, Gaihe and He, Bing and Wen, Ronghui",
year = "2023",
abstract = "The infrequent rainfall caused drought prone condition particularly in semi-arid regions of China, where most of the precipitation occurs in summer season. Thus, the summer rainwater conservation is very important for winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) production. Therefore a 2-year field experiment was conducted on straw mulch along with N fertilizer to improve physiology, nitrogen use efficiency (NUE), wheat yield, and water use efficiency (WUE). Maize (Zea mays) was a rotated crop after wheat, and therefore maize straw mulch (S1, 0 kg ha−1; S2, 4500 kg ha−1; S3, 9000 kg ha−1) was in the main plots, and N fertilizer (N1, 0 kg ha−1; N2, 192 kg ha−1 (80%); N3, 240 kg ha−1 (100%)) was in the sub plots. The interaction of S3N3 and S3N2 produced 59.2% and 43.8% higher net photosynthesis and enhanced its characteristics at booting stage compared with that of S1N1. Higher SPAD values (49.1 and 41.0%) and leaf area (85.6 and 61.0%) measured with S3N3 and S3N2 treatments at booting stage compared with S1N1. Both S3N2 and S3N3 had increased wheat N-uptake (91 and 103%, respectively) compared to S1N1. While S3N3 and S3N2 enhanced soil moisture conservation, NUE (19.7 and 22.8%), and WUE (47.2 and 47.2%) with the improvement in the growth yield of wheat compared to S1N1. Higher 7604 kg ha−1 of wheat grain yield was obtained from interaction of S3N2. Therefore, interaction of S3N2 is a viable approach for improving the winter wheat crop performance in term of NUE, WUE and wheat yield for semiarid areas in China.",
publisher = "Crop Science Society of America",
journal = "Agronomy Journal",
title = "Straw mulch decreased N fertilizer requirements via regulating soil moisture and temperature to improve physiology, nitrogen and water use efficiency of wheat",
doi = "10.1002/agj2.21437"
}
Akhtar, K., Ain, N. U., Wang, W., Ren, G., Feng, Y., Đalović, I., Prasad, V. P.V., Yang, G., He, B.,& Wen, R.. (2023). Straw mulch decreased N fertilizer requirements via regulating soil moisture and temperature to improve physiology, nitrogen and water use efficiency of wheat. in Agronomy Journal
Crop Science Society of America..
https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.21437
Akhtar K, Ain NU, Wang W, Ren G, Feng Y, Đalović I, Prasad VP, Yang G, He B, Wen R. Straw mulch decreased N fertilizer requirements via regulating soil moisture and temperature to improve physiology, nitrogen and water use efficiency of wheat. in Agronomy Journal. 2023;.
doi:10.1002/agj2.21437 .
Akhtar, Kashif, Ain, Noor Ul, Wang, Weiyu, Ren, Guangxin, Feng, Yongzhong, Đalović, Ivica, Prasad, Vara P.V., Yang, Gaihe, He, Bing, Wen, Ronghui, "Straw mulch decreased N fertilizer requirements via regulating soil moisture and temperature to improve physiology, nitrogen and water use efficiency of wheat" in Agronomy Journal (2023),
https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.21437 . .
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