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Oligopeptides Represent a Preferred Source of Organic N Uptake: A Global Phenomenon?
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Oligopeptides Represent a Preferred Source of Organic N Uptake: A Global Phenomenon?

Mark Farrell, Paul W. Hill, John Farrar, Thomas H. DeLuca, Paula Roberts, Knut Kielland, Randy Dahlgren, Daniel V. Murphy, Phil J. Hobbs, Richard D. Bardgett, …
Ecosystems (New York), Vol.16(1), pp.133-145
2013

Abstract

Ecology Environmental Sciences & Ecology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology
Over the past 20 years, our understanding of soil nitrogen (N) cycling has changed with evidence that amino acids are major substrates for both soil microorganisms and plants. However, the recent discovery that plants and microorganisms can directly utilize small peptides in soil needs to be evaluated for its ecological significance, because peptides are released earlier in protein decomposition and thus would provide significant competitive advantage to any organism that can use them directly. We tested whether soil microorganisms took up peptides faster than amino acids across a broad range of ecosystems. We show that l-enantiomeric-peptidic-N is taken up significantly faster than the equivalent monomer, and that this is universal across soils from different ecosystems, with distinct microbial communities. Peptides may have an unrecognized, global, importance in the terrestrial N cycle, providing N to soil microorganisms at an earlier stage of decomposition than previously acknowledged.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#2 Zero Hunger
#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

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InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.45 Soil Science
3.45.112 Soil Carbon Dynamics
Web Of Science research areas
Ecology
ESI research areas
Environment/Ecology
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