Acquisition of host-derived carbon in biomass of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Pisolithus microcarpus is correlated to fungal carbon demand and plant defences

Emiko K. Stuart, Vasanth Singan, Mojgan Amirebrahimi, Hyunsoo Na, Vivian Ng,Igor Grigoriev,Francis Martin,Ian C. Anderson,Jonathan M. Plett,Krista L. Plett

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY(2023)

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摘要
Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi are key players in forest carbon (C) sequestration, receiving a substantial proportion of photosynthetic C from their forest tree hosts in exchange for plant growth-limiting soil nutrients. However, it remains unknown whether the fungus or plant controls the quantum of C in this exchange, nor what mechanisms are involved. Here, we aimed to identify physiological and genetic properties of both partners that influence ECM C transfer. Using a microcosm system, stable isotope tracing, and transcriptomics, we quantified plant-to-fungus C transfer between the host plant Eucalyptus grandis and nine isolates of the ECM fungus Pisolithus microcarpus that range in their mycorrhization potential and investigated fungal growth characteristics and plant and fungal genes that correlated with C acquisition. We found that C acquisition by P. microcarpus correlated positively with both fungal biomass production and the expression of a subset of fungal C metabolism genes. In the plant, C transfer was not positively correlated to the number of colonized root tips, but rather to the expression of defence- and stress-related genes. These findings suggest that C acquisition by ECM fungi involves individual fungal demand for C and defence responses of the host against C drain. Mutualistic ectomycorrhizal fungi are able to sequester carbon based on their growth characteristics and on the degree to which they evade host immune defence responses.
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carbon,ectomycorrhizal symbiosis,Pisolithus microcarpus,stable isotopes,transcriptomics
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