Abstract

Cell walls are deeply involved in the molecular talk between partners during plant and microbe interactions, and their role in mycorrhizae, i.e., the widespread symbiotic associations established between plant roots and soil fungi, has been investigated extensively. All mycorrhizal interactions achieve full symbiotic functionality through the development of an extensive contact surface between the plant and fungal cells, where signals and nutrients are exchanged. The exchange of molecules between the fungal and the plant cytoplasm takes place both through their plasma membranes and their cell walls; a functional compartment, known as the symbiotic interface, is thus defined. Among all the symbiotic interfaces, the complex intracellular interface of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis has received a great deal of attention since its first description. Here, in fact, the host plasma membrane invaginates and proliferates around all the developing intracellular fungal structures, and cell wall material is laid down between this membrane and the fungal cell surface. By contrast, in ectomycorrhizae (ECM), where the fungus grows outside and between the root cells, plant and fungal cell walls are always in direct contact and form the interface between the two partners. The organization and composition of cell walls within the interface compartment is a topic that has attracted widespread attention, both in ecto- and endomycorrhizae. The aim of this review is to provide a general overview of the current knowledge on this topic by integrating morphological observations, which have illustrated cell wall features during mycorrhizal interactions, with the current data produced by genomic and transcriptomic approaches.

Highlights

  • Plant cell walls form a dynamic extracellular matrix that actively controls growth and development, and are essential for the functionality of plants (Keegstra, 2010)

  • The aim of this review is to provide an overview of the current knowledge on the dynamics of plant and fungal walls in mycorrhizae, as well as on their symbiotic interfaces, which – not surprisingly – have attracted a great deal of attention from the scientific community

  • Genome/transcriptome approaches applied to mycorrhizal fungi, and to the green partners, have had a profound effect on our knowledge of the biology of mycorrhizal symbiosis

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Plant cell walls form a dynamic extracellular matrix that actively controls growth and development, and are essential for the functionality of plants (Keegstra, 2010). Unlike pathogenic interactions, where the fungal pathogen may be effective even with a limited presence in the plant tissues, in mycorrhizae, i.e., the widespread symbiotic associations established between plant roots and soil fungi (Bonfante and Genre, 2010), fungal colonization may involve as much as 80% of the secondary roots (Smith and Read, 2008). Of their typology and their partner’s identity, mycorrhizal interactions achieve their functionality through the development of an extensive contact surface between plant and fungal cells, allowing signals and nutrients to be exchanged. The structural issues that result from morphological observations, and the biosynthetic aspects that stem from genomic and transcriptomic approaches, will be considered in this review

Cell walls and mycorrhizal symbiosis
Findings
CONCLUSION
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