Constitutive overexpression of the sucrose transporter SoSUT1 in potato plants increases arbuscular mycorrhiza fungal root colonization under high, but not under low, soil phosphorus availability |
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Authors: | Gabriel-Neumann Elke Neumann Günter Leggewie Georg George Eckhard |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Aridland Agriculture, United Arab Emirates University, Al-Ain, United Arab Emirates b Institute of Plant Nutrition (330), Hohenheim University, 70593 Stuttgart, Germany c Max-Planck-Institut für Molekulare Pflanzenphysiologie, 14476 Golm, Germany d Institute of Vegetable and Ornamental Crops (IGZ), 14979 Grossbeeren, Germany e Department of Crop Sciences, Humboldt University, 10099 Berlin, Germany |
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Abstract: | The sucrose transporter SUT1 functions in phloem loading of photoassimilates in solanaceous plant species. In the present study, wildtype and transgenic potato plants with either constitutive overexpression or antisense inhibition of SUT1 were grown under high or low phosphorus (P) fertilization levels in the presence or absence of the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus Glomus intraradices. At a low soil P fertilization level, the extent of AM fungal root colonization was not different among the genotypes. In all plants, the AM symbiosis contributed significantly to P uptake under these conditions. In response to a high soil P fertilization level, all genotypes showed a decrease in AM fungal root colonization, indicating that the expression level of SUT1 does not constitute a major mechanism of control over AM development in response to the soil P availability. However, plants with overexpression of SUT1 showed a higher extent of AM fungal root colonization compared with the other genotypes when the soil P availability was high. Whether an increased symbiotic C supply, alterations in the phytohormonal balance, or a decreased synthesis of antimicrobial compounds was the major cause for this effect requires further investigation. In plants with impaired phloem loading, a low C status of plant sink tissues did apparently not negatively affect plant C supply to the AM symbiosis. It is possible that, at least during vegetative and early generative growth, source rather than sink tissues exert control over amounts of C supplied to AM fungi. |
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Keywords: | AM, arbuscular mycorrhiza C, carbohydrate DW, dry weight High P/Low P, high/low soil phosphorus fertilization level SUT1antisense, transgenic Solanum tuberosum L. plants with constitutive antisense repression of the sucrose transporter StSUT1 SUT1sense, transgenic S. tuberosum plants with constitutive overexpression of the sucrose transporter SoSUT1 (from Spinacia oleracea L.) WT, wildtype S. tuberosum cv. Dé siré e plants |
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