共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
Aims and Background
Many plants preferentially grow roots into P-enriched soil patches, but little is known about how the presence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) affects this response.Methods
Lotus japonicus (L.) was grown in a low-P soil with (a) no additional P, (b) homogeneous P (28 mg pot?1), (c) low heterogeneous P (9.3 mg pot?1), and (d) high heterogeneous P (28 mg pot?1). Each P treatment was combined with one of three mycorrhiza treatments: no mycorrhizae, Glomus intraradices, indigenous AMF. Real-time PCR was used to assess the abundance of G. intraradices and the indigeneous AMF G. mosseae and G. claroideum.Results
Mycorrhization and P fertilization strongly increased plant growth. Homogeneous P supply enhanced growth in both mycorrhizal treatments, while heterogeneous P fertilization increased biomass production only in treatments with indigenous AMF inoculation. Preferential root allocation into P-enriched soil was significant only in absence of AMF. The abundance of AMF species was similar in P-enriched and unfertilized soil patches.Conclusion
Mycorrhization may completely override preferential root growth responses of plants to P- patchiness in soil. The advantage of this effect for the plants is to give roots more freedom to forage for other resources in demand for growth and to adapt to variable soil conditions. 相似文献3.
Summary The vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus,Glomus versiforme increased significantly the growth ofAsparagus officinalis under controlled conditions using Turface as the growth medium. The growth responses, including increases in root fresh weight, numbers of shoots, shoot dry weight, and shoot height follow a pattern similar to other mycorrhizal systems. Indigenous VAM fungi appeared to have negative effects on average shoot fresh and dry weight, number of shoots per pot and average shoot height on one year oldA. officinalis seedlings obtained from the field and grown under controlled conditions. These results may be due either to the high levels of soluble phosphate present in the soil or the ineffectiveness of the particular indigenous fungi as mycorrhizal fungi in asparagus. Indigenous mycorrhizal fungi overwinter in asparagus root crown as vesicles and as external and internal hyphae. Soil obtained from the same fields as the one year old crowns was a good source of mycorrhizal inoculum for sterile seedlings. 相似文献
4.
5.
Interactions between mycorrhizal fungi and other soil organisms 总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12
Mycorrhizal fungi interact with a wide range of other soil organisms, in the root, in the rhizosphere and in the bulk soil.
These interactions may be inhibitory or stimulatory; some are clearly competitive, others may be mutualistic. Effects can
be seen at all stages of the mycorrhizal fungal life-cycle, from spore population dynamics (predation, dispersal and germination)
through root colonization to external hyphal growth. Two areas that seem likely to be of particular importance to the functioning
of the symbiosis are the role of bacteria in promoting mycorrhiza formation and of soil animals in grazing the external mycelium.
Mycorrhizal fungi also modify the interactions of plants with other soil organisms, both pathogens, such as root-inhabiting
nematodes and fungi, and mutualists, notably nitrogen-fixing bacteria. These interactions are probably important both in natural
ecosystems, where pathogens are increasingly recognized as playing controlling roles, and in agricultural systems, where mycorrhizas
may be valuable in designing integrated systems of pest control and growth stimulation. 相似文献
6.
Miransari M 《Applied microbiology and biotechnology》2011,89(4):917-930
The soil environment is interesting and complicated. There are so many interactions taking place in the soil, which determine
the properties of soil as a medium for the growth and activities of plants and soil microorganisms. The soil fungi, arbuscular
mycorrhiza (AM), are in mutual and beneficial symbiosis with most of the terrestrial plants. AM fungi are continuously interactive
with a wide range of soil microorganisms including nonbacterial soil microorganisms, plant growth promoting rhizobacteria,
mycorrhiza helper bacteria and deleterious bacteria. Their interactions can have important implications in agriculture. There
are some interesting interactions between the AM fungi and soil bacteria including the binding of soil bacteria to the fungal
spore, the injection of molecules by bacteria into the fungal spore, the production of volatiles by bacteria and the degradation
of fungal cellular wall. Such mechanisms can affect the expression of genes in AM fungi and hence their performance and ecosystem
productivity. Hence, consideration of such interactive behavior is of significance. In this review, some of the most important
findings regarding the interactions between AM fungi and soil bacteria with some new insights for future research are presented. 相似文献
7.
丛枝菌根真菌与植食性昆虫的相互作用 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
丛枝菌根(arbuscular mycorrhizal AM)真菌与昆虫均是陆地生态系统中的重要组分,同植物关系密切,对植物的影响和作用是巨大的。生态系统中则以AM真菌-植物-昆虫互作体系参预食物网与生态过程。早在20世纪80年代,人们已开始研究AM真菌对昆虫的影响。进入21世纪人们越来越重视AM真菌与昆虫的相互作用。总结了AM真菌对昆虫取食偏好、生长、繁殖和对植物危害等方面的影响、以及昆虫对AM真菌侵染、扩展和产孢的影响;分析了植物营养状况、昆虫性别、昆虫龄期和AM真菌种类等对AM真菌与昆虫相互作用的影响特点;探讨了AM真菌与昆虫相互作用的机制;展望了利用AM真菌抑制植食性害虫、及促进天敌昆虫和部分传粉昆虫作用的可能性,旨在丰富菌根学研究内容、促进AM真菌与昆虫互作领域的深入研究、为探索生物防控农林业害虫的新途径提供依据。 相似文献
8.
I. R. Sanders R. Streitwolf-Engel M. G. A. van der Heijden T. Boller A. Wiemken 《Oecologia》1998,117(4):496-503
Prunella vulgaris was inoculated with different arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and grown at two concentrations of CO2 (ambient, 350 μl l−1, and elevated, 600 μl l−1) to test whether a plants response to elevated CO2 is dependent on the species of AMF colonizing the roots. Using compartments accessible only to AMF hyphae but not to roots,
we also tested whether elevated CO2 affects the growth of external AMF hyphae. Plant biomass was significantly greater at elevated than at ambient CO2; the biomass of the root system, for example, increased by a factor of 2. The colonization of AMF inside the root remained
constant, indicating that the total AMF inside the root system also increased by a factor of 2. The length of external AMF
hyphae at elevated CO2 was up to 5 times that at ambient CO2, indicating that elevated CO2 promoted allocation of AMF biomass to the external hyphae. The concentration and content of phosphorus in the stolons differed
significantly between ambient and elevated CO2 but this resulted in either an increase or a decrease, according to which AMF isolate occupied the roots. We hypothesized
that an increase in external hyphal growth at elevated CO2 would result in increased P acquistion by the plant. To test this we supplied phosphorus, in a compartment only accessible
to AMF hyphae. Plants did not acquire more phosphorus at elevated CO2 when phosphorus was added to this compartment. Large increases in AMF hyphal growth could, however, play a significant role
in the movement of fixed carbon to the soil and increase soil aggregation.
Received: 28 March 1998 / Accepted: 27 August 1998 相似文献
9.
Summary We have investigated whether direct physical interactions occur between arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPRs), some of which are used as biocontrol agents. Attachment of rhizobia and pseudomonads to the spores and fungal mycelium ofGigaspora margarita has been assessed in vitro and visualized by a combination of electron and confocal microscopy. The results showed that both rhizobia and pseudomonads adhere to spores and hyphae of AM fungi germinated under sterile conditions, although the degree of attachment depended upon the strain.Pseudomonas fluorescens strain WCS 365 andRhizobium leguminosarum strains B556 and 3841 were the most effective colonizers. Extracellular material of bacterial origin containing cellulose produced around the attached bacteria may mediate fungal/bacterial interactions. These results suggest that antagonistic and synergistic interactions between AM fungi and rhizosphere bacteria may be mediated by soluble factors or physical contact. They also support the view that AM fungi are a vehicle for the colonization of plant roots by soil rhizobacteria.Abbreviations AM
arbuscular mycorrhiza
- PGPR
plant growth promoting rhizobacteria
- CBH
cellobiohydrolase
- DAPG
2,4-(diacetyl-phloroglucinol
- TY
triptone-yeast
- LB
Lauria-Bertani
Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Eberhard Schnepf on the occasion of his retirement 相似文献
10.
《Journal of Plant Interactions》2013,8(3):179-186
Abstract Interactions between three genotypes (Ljsym 71-1, Ljsym 71-2 and Ljsym 72) of Lotus japoicus and one isolate from each of four species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomus sp. R-10, Glomus intraradices, Glomus etunicatum, and Gigaspora margarita) were investigated and compared with the wild-type ‘Gifu’ B-129. All the three genotypes showed no or defective internal colonization after inoculation with these AM fungi. In Ljsym72 mutant, the AM fungi produced deformed appressoria on the root surface, but failed to form any internal structures (internal hyphae, arbuscules and vesicles) except only in Glomus intraradices. The Ljsym71-1 and Ljsym71-2 mutants had more deformed appressoria and occasionally formed internal hyphae, arbuscules and vesicles, depending on AM fungi used. Wild-type ‘Gifu’ (nod+myc+) plants had typical colonization. The colonization of mutants by several fungi varied and provides a basis for studying recognition and compatibility between plants and mycorrhizal fungal species. These mutants also will be useful in studies of the genetics of the symbiosis between plant species and AM fungi. 相似文献
11.
The effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization of Leucanthemum vulgare on parasitism of a leaf‐mining insect was studied in a field and a laboratory experiment. In the field, parasitism of Chromatomyia syngenesiae by Diglyphus isaea was lower on mycorrhizal plants, compared with plants where the association was reduced. A laboratory experiment, in which L. vulgare was inoculated with three species of AM fungi, showed that the effects on parasitism rates were mycorrhizal species‐dependent. Some fungal combinations increased parasitism, some decreased it, while others had no effect. It is concluded that the most likely cause of these differences is plant size, with parasitoid searching efficiency being reduced on the larger plants, resulting from certain mycorrhizal species combinations. However, a mycorrhizal effect on herbivore‐produced plant volatiles cannot be ruled out. 相似文献
12.
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) live in symbiosis with most plant species and produce underground extraradical hyphal networks functional in the uptake and translocation of mineral nutrients from the soil to host plants. This work investigated whether fungal genotype can affect patterns of interconnections and structural traits of extraradical mycelium (ERM), by comparing three Glomeraceae species growing in symbiosis with five plant hosts. An isolate of Funneliformis coronatus consistently showed low ability to form interconnected ERM and self-incompatibility that represented up to 21 % of hyphal contacts. The frequency of post-fusion self-incompatible interactions, never detected before in AMF extraradical networks, was 8.9 %. In F. coronatus ERM, the percentage of hyphal contacts leading to perfect hyphal fusions was 1.2–7.7, while it ranged from 25.8–48 to 35.6–53.6 in Rhizophagus intraradices and Funneliformis mosseae, respectively. Low interconnectedness of F. coronatus ERM resulted also from a very high number of non-interacting contacts (83.2 %). Such findings show that AMF genotypes in Glomeraceae can differ significantly in anastomosis behaviour and that ERM interconnectedness is modulated by the fungal symbiont, as F. coronatus consistently formed poorly interconnected networks when growing in symbiosis with five different host plants and in the asymbiotic stage. Structural traits, such as extent, density and hyphal self-compatibility/incompatibility, may represent key factors for the differential performance of AMF, by affecting fungal absorbing surface and foraging ability and thus nutrient flow from soil to host roots. 相似文献
13.
A new hypothesis to explain allocation of dry matter between mycorrhizal fungi and pine seedlings in relation to nutrient supply 总被引:13,自引:1,他引:13
Nutrient uptake by forest trees is largely dependent on their associated ectomycorrhizal fungi. The presence of extramatrical mycelium produced by ectomycorrhizal fungi allows trees to exploit a larger soil volume. In this paper the effects of macronutrients on the production of extramatrical mycelium are reviewed. It is concluded that elevated levels of nitrogen and, to some extent, phosphorus strongly inhibit the development of extramatrical mycelium. A deficiency of phosphorus, on the other hand, stimulates ectomycorrhizal development. Low levels of phosphorus may offset the negative influence of nitrogen, indicating that the nitrogen effect is indirect. No other macronutrients have been shown to affect extramatrical mycelium significantly, however, very few studies have been made.To explain reduced ectomycorrhizal development under conditions of high N availability, it has been suggested that the host would allocate less carbohydrate to the mycobiont under such conditions owing to a greater demand for carbon by growing shoots. In the present paper an alternative explanation is suggested: The fungus is forced to take up all available nitrogen and must therefore consume the available carbohydrate in order to assimilate it. The surplus of carbohydrates after nitrogen assimilation can then be used to produce fungal mycelium and fruit bodies. However, the total allocation of host carbohydrate to the mycorrhizal fungus is not reduced at elevated levels of N supply. In contrast with previous theories, the present one proposes that it is the fungus, rather than the host which adjusts its carbon allocation patterns to the N supply. 相似文献
14.
Many fungi capable of forming sheathing (ecto-) mycorrhizas are associated with trees. But what are the rules governing their occurrence? Evidence from first generation woodlands/forests, where trees grow on sites that have been treeless for many years, indicates that species of fungi occurring at early stages of woodland development ('early-stage fungi') are, in due course, superseded by others ('late-stage fungi'). There is an ordered succession which seems to reflect, in large measure, the different abilities of early- and late-stage fungi to form mycorrhizas on roots growing in soils with accumulations of recalcitrant leaf litter. In second generation woodlands/forests there seems to be little evidence of early-stage fungi. This is not so surprising as it may seem, bearing in mind that their soils are already likely to have accumulations of recalcitrant litter. Instead of classifying sheathing mycorrhizal fungi by referring to the temporal stage of woodland development, it now seems more meaningful to judge them by their abilities to colonize roots in soils with or without accumulations of different types of litter. 相似文献
15.
丛枝菌根真菌和植物寄生线虫 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
本文综述了土壤微生物中丛枝菌根真菌和植物寄生线虫的互作关系及其互作机理,并阐述了丛枝菌根真菌在防治植物线虫病害方面的应用前景和实际操作中应注意的技术环节。 相似文献
16.
17.
S. Fracchia M.T. Mujica I. García-Romera J.M. García-Garrido J. Martín J.A. Ocampo A. Godeas 《Plant and Soil》1998,200(2):131-137
The saprophytic fungi Wardomyces inflatus (Marchal) Hennebert, Paecilomyces farinosus (Holm & Gray) A. H. S. Brown & G. Sm., Gliocladium roseum Bain., sterile dark mycelium (SDM-54), Trichoderma pseudokoningii Rifai and Trichoderma harzianum Rifai were isolated from sporocarps of Glomus mosseae. The effect of saprophytic fungi on G. mosseae spore germination was tested on water agar. Wardomyces inflatus decreased the percent germination of G. mosseae spores; G. roseum, T. pseudokoningii and T. harzianum had no effect on germination; and P. farinosus and SDM-54 increased the percentage of spore germination of G. mosseae after 4 d. Wardomyces inflatus significantly decreased hyphal length of spores which germinated, but no other saprophytic fungi affected hyphal growth. Trichoderma pseudokoningii, T. harzianum, P. farinosus and SDM-54 increased the number of auxiliary cells formed by G. mosseae. The effect of saprophytic fungi on arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization of soybean was studied in a greenhouse trial. The percentage of soybean root length colonized was decreased by W. inflatus, unaffected by SDM-54 and T. harzianum, and increased by P. farinosus. Gliocladium roseum decreased root length colonized when plants were 12 wk old, and T. pseudokoningii increased colonization of roots when plants were 4 wk old. Antagonistic, synergistic and neutral actions of G. mosseae upon the saprophytic fungi were observed. The population of T. harzianum decreased and the populations of T. pseudokoningii and SDM-54 increased in the presence of G. mosseae. Our results indicate a complex interaction between G. mosseae and associated saprophytic fungi. 相似文献
18.
【目的】利用丛枝菌根(Arbuscular mycorrhiza,AM)真菌对寄主植物的偏好性和不同寄主植物的功能互补作用,建立AM真菌的高效繁殖体系。【方法】以玉米(Zea may L.)、高粱[Sorghum bicolor(L.)Moench]和白车轴草(Trifolium repens L.)为寄主植物,采用寄主植物单作和间作的盆栽培养法,研究不同栽培模式对光壁无梗囊霉(Acaulospora laevis)、单孢球囊霉(Glomus monosporum)和根内球囊霉(G.intraradices)3种AM真菌繁殖能力的影响,通过地上部分生物量的分配分析,探索C3和C4植物对AM真菌共生关系的"功能互补"效应及机制。【结果】间作模式下,寄主植物地上部分总生物量和3种AM真菌的孢子密度均显著高于单作(P0.05);单作和间作栽培模式下,3种AM真菌对玉米地上部分生物量响应无显著差异(P0.05),但单孢球囊霉和根内球囊霉对高粱地上部分生物量产生显著影响(P0.05);两种间作栽培模式下,根内球囊霉对白车轴草地上部分生物量也产生了显著影响(P0.05)。【结论】3种AM真菌对3种寄主植物的共生偏好性不同,且C3和C4植物对AM真菌共生关系存在一定的"功能互补"效应,利用AM真菌的寄主植物偏好性和不同植物间的功能互补关系,增加AM真菌的孢子产量,有利于AM真菌高效繁殖体系的建立。 相似文献
19.
Calcium ion is considered a ubiquitous second messenger in all eukaryotic cells. Analysis of intracellular Ca2+ concentration dynamics has demonstrated its signalling role in plant cells in response to a wide array of environmental cues. The implication of Ca2+ in the early steps of the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis has been frequently claimed, mainly by analogy with what firmly demonstrated in the rhizobium-legume symbiosis. We recently documented transient Ca2+ changes in plant cells challenged with diffusible molecules released by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Ca2+ measurements by the recombinant aequorin method provided new insights into the molecular communications between plants and these beneficial fungi.Key words: legume symbioses, arbuscular mycorrhiza, calcium signalling, fungal signal, plant cell cultures, aequorinIn the rhizosphere plants meet a wide array of microorganisms. In favorable interactions, such as arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and nitrogen fixing symbioses, a dialogue is progressively established between the two interacting organisms to make the appropriate partner choice. These two-way communications rely on the interchange of signals released by both potential symbionts. After perception of the signalling molecules, a signal transduction pathway is induced, leading to the activation of the proper genetic and developmental program in both partners.Variations in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration occur as one of the initial steps in signalling pathways activated in plants when they encounter pathogens,1 fungal biocontrol agents2 and nitrogen-fixing bacteria.3 Molecules secreted by microorganisms, after binding to specific receptors, trigger in plant cells transient changes in cytosolic Ca2+ level, due to the influx of the ion from the extracellular environment and/or the release from internal Ca2+ storage compartments.4,5 Ca2+ messages delivered to plant cells are at least partly deciphered on the basis of their spatial and temporal features. The occurrence of different Ca2+ signatures guarantees the specificity of the ensuing physiological responses.In the legume-rhizobium symbiosis a definite pattern of Ca2+ oscillations has been reported to occur in response to the rhizobial signalling molecule, the Nod factor, in the nucleus and perinuclear cytoplasm of the root hair.6 The Ca2+ spike number has been recently demonstrated to regulate nodulation gene expression.7Legumes are able to engage in a dual symbiotic interaction, with rhizobia and AM fungi. Components of the Ca2+-mediated signalling pathway are shared by the two symbioses.8 In the mycorrhizal signal transduction pathway the involvement of Ca2+ has long been speculated, based on the observed similarities with symbiotic nitrogen fixation.3To evaluate the possible participation of Ca2+ in the early steps of the AM symbiosis, we have used a simplified experimental system given by plant cell suspension cultures stably expressing the bioluminescent Ca2+-sensitive reporter aequorin.9 The use of cultured cells circumvents the problem posed by multilayered organs: in aequorin-transformed seedlings, possible Ca2+ changes occurring in rhizodermal cells—the first place where the AM fungal signals are perceived and transduced—can be misrecorded due to luminescence calibration over all root cell layers, resulting in an underestimation of the Ca2+ signal in the responsive cells. An experimental design based on challenging host plant cells with the culture medium of different AM fungi (Gigaspora margarita, Glomus mosseae and intraradices) provided the first firm evidence that Ca2+ is involved as intracellular messenger during mycorrhizal signalling, at least in a pre-contact stage. Cytosolic Ca2+ changes, characterized by specific kinetic parameters, were triggered by diffusates obtained from AM resting and germinating spores,9 and extraradical mycelium.10 Cultured plant cells demonstrated to be competent to perceive the diffusible signal released by AM fungi and to decode the message in a Ca2+-dependent pathway. Based on these experiments, it seems that AM fungi announce their presence to the plant through the constitutive release of a chemical signal, even before experiencing the proximity of the plant or its AM symbiotic signals. The notion that the secreted fungal molecules herald, through Ca2+, a beneficial message which can be acknowledged only by competent receivers, is supported by: (1) the lack of defense response induction and the upregulation of some genes essential for the AM symbiosis initiation in host plant cells; (2) the unresponsiveness of cultured cells from the nonhost plant Arabidopsis thaliana.Ca2+-mediated perception of both AM fungal and rhizobial signals by plant cells unifies the signalling pathways activated in the two symbioses. However, the actual occurrence of Ca2+ spiking in AM symbiosis remains to be ascertained, due to limitations of the recombinant aequorin method, when applied to an asynchronous cell population. Contribution of internal Ca2+ stores, in particular the nucleus, to the observed Ca2+ changes will be a future research goal to be achieved through a pharmacological approach and/or targeting of Ca2+ indicators to intracellular compartments.The identification of the plant-derived mycorrhizal signal as strigolactones11 and their inducing activity on AM fungi12 have represented a major breakthrough in the AM symbiosis research field. Elucidation of the chemical nature of the AM fungal factor, which plays several effects on host plants,9,13–15 is eagerly awaited.Understanding how AM fungi and rhizobia select compatible plant hosts, thus activating the appropriate symbiotic program, is another facet to be considered in the future to get a complete overview of early signaling events in legume symbioses. Analysis of Ca2+ signalling implication in the microbial partner would require the delivery of reliable and sensitive Ca2+ probes (such as aequorinor GFP-based16) for Ca2+ measurements in living microorganisms. The recombinant aequorin method has been successfully applied to monitor dynamic changes in intracellular Ca2+ levels in the bacteria Anabaena sp.,17 E. coli,18 and recently by us in rhizobial strains.19 Unfortunately, AM fungi have proved not to be amenable to stable transformation, being coenocytic, multinucleate and heterokaryotic,20,21 and only transient transformants have been obtained so far.22,23 Further development of the transformation technologies may provide in the future a valuable tool to analyse, from the fungal side, signal perception and transduction during arbuscular mycorrhiza establishment. 相似文献