Arbuscular-mycorrhizal fungi are obligate endosymbionts that colonize the roots of almost 80% of land plants. This paper describes the employment of a combined morphological and molecular approach to demonstrate that the cytoplasm of the arbuscular-mycorrhizal fungus Gigaspora margarita harbors a further bacterial endosymbiont. Intracytoplasmic bacterium-like organisms (BLOs) were detected ultrastructurally in its spores and germinating and symbiotic mycelia. Morphological observations with a fluorescent stain revealed about 250,000 live bacteria inside each spore. The sequence for the small-subunit rRNA gene obtained for the BLOs from the spores was compared with those for representatives of the eubacterial lineages. Molecular phylogenetic analysis unambiguously showed that the endosymbiont of G. margarita was an rRNA group II pseudomonad (genus Burkholderia). PCR assays with specifically designed oligonucleotides were used to check that the sequence came from the BLOs. Successful amplification was obtained when templates from both the spores and the symbiotic mycelia were used. A band of the expected length was also obtained from spores of a Scutellospora sp. No bands were given by the negative controls. These findings indicate that mycorrhizal systems can include plant, fungal, and bacterial cells.

An obligately endosymbiotic mycorrhizal fungus itself harbors obligately intracellular bacteria / V. Bianciotto, C. Bandi, D. Minerdi, M. Sironi, H.V. Tichy, P. Bonfante. - In: APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY. - ISSN 0099-2240. - 62:8(1996 Aug), pp. 3005-3010.

An obligately endosymbiotic mycorrhizal fungus itself harbors obligately intracellular bacteria

C. Bandi
Secondo
;
1996

Abstract

Arbuscular-mycorrhizal fungi are obligate endosymbionts that colonize the roots of almost 80% of land plants. This paper describes the employment of a combined morphological and molecular approach to demonstrate that the cytoplasm of the arbuscular-mycorrhizal fungus Gigaspora margarita harbors a further bacterial endosymbiont. Intracytoplasmic bacterium-like organisms (BLOs) were detected ultrastructurally in its spores and germinating and symbiotic mycelia. Morphological observations with a fluorescent stain revealed about 250,000 live bacteria inside each spore. The sequence for the small-subunit rRNA gene obtained for the BLOs from the spores was compared with those for representatives of the eubacterial lineages. Molecular phylogenetic analysis unambiguously showed that the endosymbiont of G. margarita was an rRNA group II pseudomonad (genus Burkholderia). PCR assays with specifically designed oligonucleotides were used to check that the sequence came from the BLOs. Successful amplification was obtained when templates from both the spores and the symbiotic mycelia were used. A band of the expected length was also obtained from spores of a Scutellospora sp. No bands were given by the negative controls. These findings indicate that mycorrhizal systems can include plant, fungal, and bacterial cells.
English
Settore VET/06 - Parassitologia e Malattie Parassitarie degli Animali
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
ago-1996
American Society for Microbiology
62
8
3005
3010
6
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
http://aem.asm.org/content/62/8/3005.full.pdf+html
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
An obligately endosymbiotic mycorrhizal fungus itself harbors obligately intracellular bacteria / V. Bianciotto, C. Bandi, D. Minerdi, M. Sironi, H.V. Tichy, P. Bonfante. - In: APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY. - ISSN 0099-2240. - 62:8(1996 Aug), pp. 3005-3010.
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
6
262
Article (author)
no
V. Bianciotto, C. Bandi, D. Minerdi, M. Sironi, H.V. Tichy, P. Bonfante
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/222652
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