| Literature DB >> 34595259 |
Adeline Becquer1, Margarita Torres-Aquino1, Christine Le Guernevé2, Laurie K Amenc1, Carlos Trives-Segura1, Siobhan Staunton1, Hervé Quiquampoix1, Claude Plassard1.
Abstract
In ectomycorrhizal plants, the fungal cells colonize the roots of their host plant to create new organs called ectomycorrhizae. In these new organs, the fungal cells colonize the walls of the cortical cells, bathing in the same apoplasm as the plant cells in a space named the 'Hartig net', where exchanges between the two partners take place. Finally, the efficiency of ectomycorrhizal fungi to improve the phosphorus nutrition of their host plants will depend on the regulation of phosphate transfer from the fungal cells to plant cells in the Hartig net through as yet unknown mechanisms. In order to investigate these mechanisms, we developed an in vitro experimental device mimicking the common apoplasm of the ectomycorrhizae (the Hartig net) to study the phosphorus metabolism in the ectomycorrhizal fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum when the fungal cells are associated or not with the plant cells of the host plant Pinus pinaster. This device can be used to monitor 32Phosphate efflux from the fungus previously incubated with 32P-orthophosphate.Entities:
Keywords: 32Phosphate efflux measurement ; Ectomycorrhizal symbiosis; Hebeloma cylindrosporum; In vitro symbiotic interface ; Pinus pinaster
Year: 2017 PMID: 34595259 PMCID: PMC8438359 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bio Protoc ISSN: 2331-8325