Abstract

During the establishment of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizas, fungal hyphae contact the root surface, form appressoria and initiate the internal colonization phase. Structural changes occur in the cell wall, the cytoplasm and the nucleus as the fungus progresses from a presymbiotic to a symbiotic phase. Nuclei in spores are in G1 whereas in intraradical hyphae they are in G1 and G2. Changes in nuclear organization are evident in various stages in the colonization process. Dramatic changes in both symbionts occur as the nutrient exchange interface is established between arbuscules and root cortical cells. An interfacial matrix, consisting of molecules common to the primary wall of the cortical cell, separates the cortical cell plasma membrane from the fungal cell wall. Ectomycorrhizas are characterized structurally by the presence of a mantle of fungal hyphae enclosing the root and usually an Hartig net of intercellular hyphae characterized by labyrinthine branching. As hyphae contact the root surface, they may respond by increasing their diameter and switching from apical growth to precocious branching. The site of initial contact of hyphae may be either the root cap or the ‘mycorrhiza infection zone’. The mantle varies considerably in structure depending on both the plant and fungus genome. In some ectomycorrhizas, the mantle may be a barrier to apoplastic transport, and in most it may store polyphosphate, glycogen, lipids and perhaps protein.

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