| Literature DB >> 30811604 |
Gennaro Carotenuto1, Veronica Volpe1, Giulia Russo1, Mara Politi1, Ivan Sciascia1, Janice de Almeida-Engler2, Andrea Genre1.
Abstract
The intracellular accommodation of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi is a paradigmatic feature of this plant symbiosis that depends on the activation of a dedicated signaling pathway and the extensive reprogramming of host cells, including striking changes in nuclear size and transcriptional activity. By combining targeted sampling of early root colonization sites, detailed confocal imaging, flow cytometry and gene expression analyses, we demonstrate that local, recursive events of endoreduplication are triggered in the Medicago truncatula root cortex during AM colonization. AM colonization induces an increase in ploidy levels and the activation of endocycle specific markers. This response anticipates the progression of fungal colonization and is limited to arbusculated and neighboring cells in the cortical tissue. Furthermore, endoreduplication is not induced in M. truncatula mutants for symbiotic signaling pathway genes. On this basis, we propose endoreduplication as part of the host cell prepenetration responses that anticipate AM fungal accommodation in the root cortex.Entities:
Keywords: Gigaspora margarita; Medicago truncatula; arbuscular mycorrhizas; confocal imaging; endoreduplication; flow cytometry; ploidy; symbiosis
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30811604 DOI: 10.1111/nph.15763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151