| Literature DB >> 23461653 |
Sally Koegel1, Nassima Ait Lahmidi2, Christine Arnould2, Odile Chatagnier2, Florian Walder1, Kurt Ineichen1, Thomas Boller1, Daniel Wipf2, Andres Wiemken1, Pierre-Emmanuel Courty1.
Abstract
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi contribute to plant nitrogen (N) acquisition. Recent studies demonstrated the transport of N in the form of ammonium during AM symbiosis. Here, we hypothesize that induction of specific ammonium transporter (AMT) genes in Sorghum bicolor during AM colonization might play a key role in the functionality of the symbiosis. For the first time, combining a split-root experiment and microdissection technology, we were able to assess the precise expression pattern of two AM-inducible AMTs, SbAMT3;1 and SbAMT4. Immunolocalization was used to localize the protein of SbAMT3;1. The expression of SbAMT3;1 and SbAMT4 was greatly induced locally in root cells containing arbuscules and in adjacent cells. However, a split-root experiment revealed that this induction was not systemic. By contrast, a strictly AM-induced phosphate transporter (SbPt11) was expressed systemically in the split-root experiment. However, a gradient of expression was apparent. Immunolocalization analyses demonstrated that SbAMT3;1 was present only in cells containing developing arbuscules. Our results show that the SbAMT3;1 and SbAMT4 genes are expressed in root cortical cells, which makes them ready to accommodate arbuscules, a process of considerable importance in view of the short life span of arbuscules. Additionally, SbAMT3;1 might play an important role in N transfer during AM symbiosis. © No claim to original Swiss government works. New PhytologistEntities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23461653 DOI: 10.1111/nph.12199
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151