Improving the efficiency of nitrogen (N) uptake and utilization in plants could potentially increase crop yields while reducing N fertilization and, subsequently, environmental pollution. Within most plants, N is transported primarily as amino acids. In this study, pea (Pisum sativum) plants overexpressing AMINO ACID PERMEASE1 (AAP1) were used to determine if and how genetic manipulation of amino acid transport from source to sink affects plant N use efficiency. The modified plants were grown under low, moderate, or high N fertilization regimes. The results showed that, independent of the N nutrition, the engineered plants allocate more N via the vasculature to the shoot and seeds and produce more biomass and higher seed yields than wild-type plants. Dependent on the amount of N supplied, the AAP1-overexpressing plants displayed improved N uptake or utilization efficiency, or a combination of the two. They also showed significantly increased N use efficiency in N-deficient as well as in N-rich soils and, impressively, required half the amount of N to produce as many fruits and seeds as control plants. Together, these data support that engineering N allocation from source to sink presents an effective strategy to produce crop plants with improved productivity as well as N use efficiency in a range of N environments.Nitrogen (N) is an essential nutrient that plants require in large amounts for growth and development. In industrial countries, high N fertilization enables maximum crop yields, and in the last 50 years, the use of synthetic N fertilizers has increased dramatically to meet the agricultural demands of a growing population (FAO, 2012;Conant et al., 2013). However, depending on the crop species and soil conditions, plants take up less than half of the applied N fertilizer (Raun and Johnson, 1999;Hodge et al., 2000;Kumar and Goh, 2002;Yang et al., 2015;Zhu et al., 2016). The remaining soil N may contaminate aquatic systems through runoffs or leached water (Crews and Peoples, 2005;Gruber and Galloway, 2008) or it may undergo denitrification and be released into the atmosphere as nitrous oxide, a powerful greenhouse gas (Bouwman, 1996;Bouwman et al., 2002), altogether resulting in negative effects on the environment and human health. Oppositely, in developing countries, access to N fertilizer is limited, and insufficient N nutrition results in low crop productivity and, ultimately, in reduced food supply (Brown et al., 2009;Lal, 2009).One solution to these issues is the production of crop varieties that are highly efficient in using N and produce high yields with reduced N input (MasclauxDaubresse et al., 2010;McAllister et al., 2012;Garnett et al., 2015). Plant nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) is determined by plant seed yield relative to the amount of N applied and is generally composed of both N uptake and N utilization efficiency (Moll et al., 1982). Nitrogen uptake efficiency (NUpE) is defined as total shoot N relative to the amount of N supplied to the soil. The uptake of N by the root is influenced by th...