nonureidetransporting
Nonureidetransporting is a term used in plant physiology and biochemistry to describe membrane transport processes or transporter proteins that move substrates other than ureides across cellular membranes. Ureides, including allantoin, allantoate, uric acid, and xanthine, can serve as nitrogen carriers in certain plant species. By contrast, non-ureide transport encompasses the movement of a broad range of other solutes, such as minerals, amino acids, sugars, organic acids, hormones, and xenobiotics. The term is not uniformly standardized, and authors often use it to distinguish ureide-specific transport from other transport activities.
Mechanistically, non-ureide transport involves multiple transporter families and modes. Plasma membrane transporters for nitrate, ammonium, amino
Biological significance includes nutrient uptake and distribution, homeostasis, detoxification, and stress responses. Non-ureide transport supports nitrogen
Research approaches combine localization, genetics, and biochemistry. Studies often use loss- or gain-of-function mutants, substrate specificity