Inside Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Roots – Molecular Probes to Understand the Symbiosis

  • Daniel Ruzicka
    Donald Danforth Plant Science Center 975 N. Warson Rd. St. Louis MO 63132
  • Srikar Chamala
    Dep. of Biology and the UF Genetics Institute Univ. of Florida Cancer & Genetics Research Complex, Room 407, 2033 Mowry Rd., PO Box 103610 Gainesville FL 32610
  • Felipe H. Barrios‐Masias
    Dep. of Land, Air and Water Resources Univ. of California‐Davis Plant and Environmental Sciences Bldg., One Shields Ave. Davis CA 95616
  • Francis Martin
    INRA, UMR1136 INRA‐Nancy Université ‘Interactions Arbres/Microorganismes,’ Centre de Nancy 54280 Champenoux France
  • Sally Smith
    Soil Group, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, Waite Campus The Univ. of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia 5005 Australia
  • Louise E. Jackson
    Dep. of Land, Air and Water Resources Univ. of California‐Davis Plant and Environmental Sciences Bldg., One Shields Ave. Davis CA 95616
  • W. Brad Barbazuk
    Dep. of Biology and the UF Genetics Institute Univ. of Florida Cancer & Genetics Research Complex, Room 407, 2033 Mowry Rd., PO Box 103610 Gainesville FL 32610
  • Daniel P. Schachtman
    Donald Danforth Plant Science Center 975 N. Warson Rd. St. Louis MO 63132

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<jats:p>Associations between arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and plants are an ancient and widespread plant microbe symbioses. Most land plants can associate with this specialized group of soil fungi (in the Glomeromycota), which enhance plant nutrient uptake in return for C derived from plant photosynthesis. Elucidating the mechanisms involved in the symbiosis between obligate symbionts such as AM fungi and plant roots is challenging because AM fungal transcripts in roots are in low abundance and reference genomes for the fungi have not been available. A deep sequencing metatranscriptomics approach was applied to a wild‐type tomato and a tomato mutant (<jats:italic>Solanum lycopersicum</jats:italic> L. cultivar RioGrande 76R) incapable of supporting a functional AM symbiosis, revealing novel AM fungal and microbial transcripts expressed in colonized roots. We confirm transcripts known to be mycorrhiza associated and report the discovery of more than 500 AM fungal and novel plant transcripts associated with mycorrhizal tomato roots including putative Zn, Fe, aquaporin, and carbohydrate transporters as well as mycorrhizal‐associated alternative gene splicing. This analysis provides a fundamental step toward identifying the molecular mechanisms of mineral and carbohydrate exchange during the symbiosis. The utility of this metatranscriptomic approach to explore an obligate biotrophic interaction is illustrated, especially as it relates to agriculturally relevant biological processes.</jats:p>

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