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Auto-activation of mycorrhizal symbiosis signaling through gibberellin deactivation in orchid seed germination.

Chihiro MiuraYuki FuruiTatsuki YamamotoYuri KannoMasaya HonjoKatsushi YamaguchiKenji SuetsuguTakahiro YagameMitsunori SeoShuji ShigenobuMasahide YamatoHironori Kaminaka
Published in: Plant physiology (2023)
Orchids parasitically depend on external nutrients from mycorrhizal fungi for seed germination. Previous findings suggest that orchids utilize a genetic system of mutualistic arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis, in which the plant hormone gibberellin (GA) negatively affects fungal colonization and development, to establish parasitic symbiosis. Although GA generally promotes seed germination in photosynthetic plants, previous studies have reported low sensitivity of GA in seed germination of mycoheterotrophic orchids where mycorrhizal symbiosis occurs concurrently. To elucidate the connecting mechanisms of orchid seed germination and mycorrhizal symbiosis at the molecular level, we investigated the effect of GA on a hyacinth orchid (Bletilla striata) seed germination and mycorrhizal symbiosis using asymbiotic and symbiotic germination methods. Additionally, we compared the transcriptome profiles between asymbiotically and symbiotically germinated seeds. Exogenous GA negatively affected seed germination and fungal colonization, and endogenous bioactive GA was actively converted to the inactive form during seed germination. Transcriptome analysis showed that B. striata shared many of the induced genes between asymbiotically and symbiotically germinated seeds, including GA metabolism- and signaling-related genes and AM-specific marker homologs. Our study suggests that orchids have evolved in a manner that they do not use bioactive GA as a positive regulator of seed germination and instead auto-activate the mycorrhizal symbiosis pathway through GA inactivation to accept the fungal partner immediately during seed germination.
Keyphrases
  • pet ct
  • plant growth
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • mass spectrometry
  • oxidative stress
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • cell wall
  • rna seq
  • hiv infected