Transcriptional regulation of host enzymes involved in the cleavage of sucrose during arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis.
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Arbuscular mycorrhiza Tomato invertase Sucrose synthase
Date
2007Referencia bibliográfica
García Rodríguez, Sonia et al. Transcriptional regulation of host enzymes involved in the cleavage of sucrose during arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis. Physiologia Plantarum 129: 737–746. 2007. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3054.2007.00873.x
Sponsorship
CICyT (AGL2003-01551); Spanish Council for Scientific Research I3PAbstract
To investigate plant carbon metabolism in arbuscular mycorrhizas, we have
analyzed expression of the tomato invertase (EC 3.2.1.26) gene family
members and the sucrose synthase (EC 2.4.1.13) gene TOMSSF in roots of
non-mycorrhizal, Glomusmosseae- and Glomus intraradices-colonized plants.
Furthermore, root soluble carbohydrate contents have been determined. Gene
expression analyses showed that the cell wall invertase Lin6, the vacuolar
invertase TIV1 and TOMSSF were upregulated in mycorrhizal roots and that
this effect was caused by a direct effect of the colonization by the arbuscular
mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and not mediated by an improved phosphorus
nutrition. This study shows for the first time upregulation of a cell wall invertase
gene in an AMassociation,which supports the general assumption that carbon
transfer across the symbiotic interface requires host sucrose hydrolysis by a cell
wall invertase. Transcriptional upregulation of sucrose-splitting enzymes
during early colonization development agrees with the decreased levels of
sucrose detected in these roots. Mycorrhizal plants had lower root glucose and
fructose concentrations, which indicate consumption of the products of
sucrose breakdown. The promoter sequences of Lin6, TIV1 and TOMSSF were
analyzed in silico to get insights into the causes of their transcriptional
activation in mycorrhizal roots. Upregulation of Lin6, TOMSSF and TIV1
expressions by salicylic acid and of TOMSSF and TIV1 by abscisic acid suggest
that these compounds might mediate upregulation of these genes in
mycorrhizal roots.