Tansley Review No. 82. Strategies of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi when infecting host plants

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Abstract

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are ancient Zygomycetes, thought to have colonized the first land plants; today, they are associated with the roots of about 80% of plant species. The symbiosis they form is potentially valuable not only for developmental programmes based on low‐input agriculture, but also as a complex experimental model, where both fungal and host plant growth are regulated. Here we review some recent progress m the area of cell and molecular biology of arbuscular mycorrhizas. Particular attention is given to strategies followed by AM fungi when, as obligate biotrophs, they establish a successful symbiosis with their host plants. Four topics are analysed: (i) parameters controlling fungal growth in the absence and presence of the host root, Le. events of DNA replication and timing of the cell cycle; (ii) mechanical and enzymatic mechanisms which allow the fungus to colonize root tissues, maintaining host viability; (iii) morphological changes induced by AM fungus host cells and, in particular, the formation de novo of a subcellular compartment termed the interface, and (iv) modifications of plant gene expression during fungal colonization, including those involving structural, symbiotic and defence‐related genes. Copyright © 1995, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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BONFANTE, P., & PEROTTO, S. (1995). Tansley Review No. 82. Strategies of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi when infecting host plants. New Phytologist, 130(1), 3–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1995.tb01810.x

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