Nitrogen (N) allocated to leaf growth in forage grasses and legumes following severe defoliation is predominately
mobilized from the remaining root and leaf sheath tissues, since both N uptake from the soil and N2 fixation are
severely down-regulated for several days. The hypothesis that a low N reserve status at the time of defoliation
limits N remobilization and leaf regrowth was tested with contrasting cultivars of Lolium perenne (cvs Aberelan
and Cariad) in flowing solution culture. Plants were grown under ‘high’ or ‘low’ (uptake of N decreased by 50%)
regimes of N supply for 10 d before a single severe defoliation. Labelling with 15N was used to assess the
importance of N reserves, including putative vegetative storage proteins, relative to N translocated from
concurrent uptake, as a source of leaf N during regrowth. Leaf regrowth, N uptake and N mobilization were all
affected by previous N supply. Low plant N status at the time of defoliation increased regrowth dry weight of
‘Aberelan’ by 10% and translocation of N absorbed from the medium by 23%, while mobilization of N reserves
was decreased by 56%. On the contrary, regrowth dry weight of ‘Cariad’ was decreased by 23%, and
translocation of N absorbed by 21% in low plant N status, compared with high plant N status. Concentrations
of soluble protein in roots and remaining leaf sheaths decreased after defoliation in plants only under optimal N
supply. Analysis of soluble proteins in sheath material by SDS–PAGE suggested that three polypeptides (55, 36.6
and 24 kDa) might function as vegetative storage proteins, although they were of low abundance in plants,
subjected to monthly harvests, grown in controlled conditions and in the field. The apparent antagonism between
uptake of NH4+ or NO3− by roots and mobilization of N reserves is discussed together with evidence for functional
vegetative storage proteins in L. perenne.