Abstract
The beneficial effect of mycorrhization on photosynthetic gas exchange of host plants under drought conditions could be related to factors other than changes in phosphorus nutrition and water uptake. Our objective was to study the influence of drought on phytohormones and gas exchange parameters in Medicago sativa L. cv. Aragón associated with or in the absence of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and/or nitrogen‐fixing bacteria. Four treatments were used: (1) plants inoculated with Glomus fasciculatum (Taxter sensu Gerd.) Gerdemann and Trappe and Rhizobium meliloti 102 F51 strain (MR); (2) plants inoculated with only Rhizobium (R); (3) plants inoculated with only mycorrhizae (M); and (4) non‐inoculated plants (N). When endophytes were well established, treatments received different levels of phosphorus and nitrogen in the nutrient solution in order to obtain plants similar in size. Sixty days after planting, plants were subjected to two cycles of drought and recovery. Midday leaf water potential (Ψ), CO2 exchange rate (CER), leaf conductance (gw) and transpiration (T), as well as leaf and root abscisic acid (ABA) and cytokinin concentrations were measured after the second drought period. Gas exchange parameters were determined by infrared gas analysis. Cytokinins and ABA levels in tissues were analysed by ELISA and HPLC, respectively. Nodulated R and MR plants had the lowest ABA concentrations in roots under well‐watered conditions. Water stress increased ABA concentrations in leaves of N, R and MR plants, while ABA concentration in M plants did not change. The highest production of ABA under water deficit was in the roots of non‐mycorrhizal plants. The ratio of ABA to cytokinin concentration strongly increased in leaves and roots of non‐mycorrhizal plants under drought. By contrast, this ratio was lowered in roots of M plants and remained unchanged in leaves and roots of MR plants when stress was imposed. The highest leaf conductances and transpirational fluxes under well‐watered conditions were those of nitrogen‐fixing R and MR plants, but these results were not impaired with increased CO2 exchange rates. Photosynthesis, leaf conductance and transpiration rates decreased in all treatments when stress was imposed, with the strongest decrease occurring in non‐mycorrhizal plants. The relationships found between these gas exchange parameters and the hormone concentrations in stressed alfalfa tissues suggest that microsymbionts have an important role in the control of gas exchange of the host plant through hormone production in roots and the ABA/cytokinin balance in leaves. The most relevant effect of mycorrhizal fungi was observed under drought conditions.
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