Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, 1015, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Laboratory for Biological Geochemistry, School of Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
ISME J. 2020 Jun;14(6):1333-1344. doi: 10.1038/s41396-020-0606-6. Epub 2020 Feb 17.
Most land plants form symbioses with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). Diversity of AMF increases plant community productivity and plant diversity. For decades, it was known that plants trade carbohydrates for phosphate with their fungal symbionts. However, recent studies show that plant-derived lipids probably represent the most essential currency of exchange. Understanding the regulation of plant genes involved in the currency of exchange is crucial to understanding stability of this mutualism. Plants encounter many different AMF genotypes that vary greatly in the benefit they confer to plants. Yet the role that fungal genetic variation plays in the regulation of this currency has not received much attention. We used a high-resolution phylogeny of one AMF species (Rhizophagus irregularis) to show that fungal genetic variation drives the regulation of the plant fatty acid pathway in cassava (Manihot esculenta); a pathway regulating one of the essential currencies of trade in the symbiosis. The regulation of this pathway was explained by clearly defined patterns of fungal genome-wide variation representing the precise fungal evolutionary history. This represents the first demonstrated link between the genetics of AMF and reprogramming of an essential plant pathway regulating the currency of exchange in the symbiosis. The transcription factor RAM1 was also revealed as the dominant gene in the fatty acid plant gene co-expression network. Our study highlights the crucial role of variation in fungal genomes in the trade of resources in this important symbiosis and also opens the door to discovering characteristics of AMF genomes responsible for interactions between AMF and cassava that will lead to optimal cassava growth.
大多数陆地植物与丛枝菌根真菌(AMF)形成共生关系。AMF 的多样性会提高植物群落的生产力和植物多样性。几十年来,人们已经知道植物与真菌共生体之间通过碳水化合物交换磷酸盐。然而,最近的研究表明,植物衍生的脂质可能是交换中最基本的货币。了解参与货币交换的植物基因的调控对于理解这种共生关系的稳定性至关重要。植物会遇到许多不同的 AMF 基因型,这些基因型在赋予植物的益处上有很大差异。然而,真菌遗传变异在这种货币的调控中的作用并没有得到太多关注。我们利用一种 AMF 物种(Rhizophagus irregularis)的高分辨率系统发育树表明,真菌遗传变异驱动了木薯(Manihot esculenta)中植物脂肪酸途径的调控;这是一种调节共生关系中贸易的基本货币之一的途径。该途径的调控可以通过代表精确真菌进化历史的真菌全基因组范围内的变异模式来解释。这代表了 AMF 遗传学与调节共生关系中交换货币的基本植物途径重编程之间的第一个明确联系。转录因子 RAM1 也被揭示为脂肪酸植物基因共表达网络中的主要基因。我们的研究强调了真菌基因组变异在这种重要共生关系中资源交换中的关键作用,也为发现 AMF 基因组中负责 AMF 与木薯相互作用的特征打开了大门,从而促进木薯的最佳生长。