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The Root-Colonizing Endophyte Piriformospora indica Supports Nitrogen-Starved Arabidopsis thaliana Seedlings with Nitrogen Metabolites.

Sandra S ScholzEmanuel BarthGilles ClementAnne MarmagneJutta Ludwig-MüllerHitoshi SakakibaraTakatoshi KibaJesús Vicente-CarbajosaStephan PollmannAnne KrappRalf Oelmüller
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
The root-colonizing endophytic fungus Piriformospora indica promotes the root and shoot growth of its host plants. We show that the growth promotion of Arabidopsis thaliana leaves is abolished when the seedlings are grown on media with nitrogen (N) limitation. The fungus neither stimulated the total N content nor did it promote 15 NO 3 - uptake from agar plates to the leaves of the host under N-sufficient or N-limiting conditions. However, when the roots were co-cultivated with 15 N-labelled P. indica , more labels were detected in the leaves of N-starved host plants but not in plants supplied with sufficient N. Amino acid and primary metabolite profiles, as well as the expression analyses of N metabolite transporter genes suggest that the fungus alleviates the adaptation of its host from the N limitation condition. P. indica alters the expression of transporter genes, which participate in the relocation of NO 3 - , NH 4 + and N metabolites from the roots to the leaves under N limitation. We propose that P. indica participates in the plant's metabolomic adaptation against N limitation by delivering reduced N metabolites to the host, thus alleviating metabolic N starvation responses and reprogramming the expression of N metabolism-related genes.
Keyphrases
  • arabidopsis thaliana
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  • genome wide
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  • binding protein
  • long non coding rna
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide identification
  • room temperature