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Anca, IA; Lumini, E; Ghignone, S; Salvioli, A; Bianciotto, V; Bonfante, P. 2009. The ftsZ gene of the endocellular bacterium Candidatus Glomeribacter gigasporarum' is preferentially expressed during the symbiotic phases of its host mycorrhizal fungus. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions. 22(3):302-310.
The arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (AM) Gigaspora margarita
consistently hosts bacteria, named 'Candidatus Glomeribacter
gigasporarum,' inside its cytoplasm. Endobacteria have a positive
impact on fungal fitness during the presymbiotic phase, prior to plant
roots colonization. We tested the hypothesis that the endobacterium and
its cell divisions depend on fungal metabolism, mirroring also the
events of the fungal life cycle which are influenced by plant signals.
We first cloned a fragment of ftsZ, a marker gene for bacterial
division, and then analyzed its expression along the different stages
of fungus development. The bacterial gene transcripts showed the
highest values when the fungus was associated to the plant, and peaked
in the extraradical mycelium. Strigolactones, which are known to
stimulate the AM fungal growth, caused a significant transcript
increase in the germinated spores in the absence of the plant. The
quantitative real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction
data were strengthened by the quantification of the dividing bacteria,
which were increasing in number in germinating spores after the
strigolactone treatment. The bioactive molecule alone did not cause any
change in the number of bacteria after their isolation from the fungus,
thus showing that the strigolactone alone cannot confer free-living
capacities to the bacterium.
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