Mycorrhiza Literature ExchangeDepartment of Plant Sciences, University of Tennessee
 
Article abstracts  |  Water relations bibliography  |  Books  |  Reviews  |  Theses/Dissertations  |  About this site  |  Links


    2007
    2006
    2005
    2004
    2003
    2002
    2001
    2000
    1999
    1998
    1997
    1996
    1995
    1994
    1993
    1992
    1991
    ICOM 3
    ICOM 2
    ICOM 1


Journal Article Abstracts

Weidmann, S; Sanchez, L; Descombin, J; Chatagnier, O; Gianinazzi, S; Gianinazzi-Pearson, V. 2004. Fungal elicitation of signal transduction-related plant genes precedes mycorrhiza establishment and requires the dmi3 gene in Medicago truncatula. MOLECULAR PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS. 17(12):1385-1393.

Address:

Gianinazzi-Pearson, V, CMSE, INRA, UMR 1088, CNRS 5184, BP 86510, F-21065 Dijon, France

Suppressive subtractive hybridization and expressed sequence tag sequencing identified 29 plant genes which are upregulated during the appressorium stage of mycorrhiza establishment between Medicago truncatula J5 (Myc(+)) and Glomus mosseae. Eleven genes coding plant proteins with predicted functions in signal transduction, transcription, and translation were investigated in more detail for their relation to early events of symbiotic interactions. Expression profiling showed that the genes are activated not only from the appressorium stage up to the fully established symbiosis in the Myc(+) genotype of M. truncatula, but also when the symbionts are not in direct cell contact, suggesting that diffusible fungal molecules (Myc factors) play a role in the induction of a signal-transduction pathway. Transcript accumulation in roots of a mycorrhiza-defective Myc(-) dmi3 mutant of M. truncatula is not modified by appressorium formation or diffusible fungal molecules, indicating that the signal transduction pathway is required for a successful G. mosseae-M. truncatula interaction leading to symbiosis development. The symbiotic nodulating bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti does not activate the 11 genes, which supposes early discrimination by plant roots between the microbial symbionts.

 

 
Home  |  International Mycorrhiza Society  |  Directory of Mycorrhizologists  |  Listserve  |  Mycorrhiza  |  Former MIE  |  Contact