Ponert Jan, Šoch Jan, Vosolsobě Stanislav, Čiháková Klára, Lipavská Helena
Department of Experimental Plant Biology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czechia.
Prague Botanical Garden, Prague, Czechia.
Front Plant Sci. 2021 Dec 9;12:793876. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2021.793876. eCollection 2021.
Orchids rely on mycorrhizal symbiosis, especially in the stage of mycoheterotrophic protocorms, which depend on carbon and energy supply from fungi. The transfer of carbon from fungi to orchids is well-documented, but the identity of compounds ensuring this transfer remains elusive. Some evidence has been obtained for the role of amino acids, but there is also vague and neglected evidence for the role of soluble carbohydrates, probably trehalose, which is an abundant fungal carbohydrate. We therefore focused on the possible role of trehalose in carbon and energy transfer. We investigated the common marsh orchid () and its symbiotic fungus sp. using a combination of cultivation approaches, high-performance liquid chromatography, application of a specific inhibitor of the enzyme trehalase, and histochemical localization of trehalase activity. We found that axenically grown orchid protocorms possess an efficient, trehalase-dependent, metabolic pathway for utilizing exogenous trehalose, which can be as good a source of carbon and energy as their major endogenous soluble carbohydrates. This is in contrast to non-orchid plants that cannot utilize trehalose to such an extent. In symbiotically grown protocorms and roots of adult orchids, trehalase activity was tightly colocalized with mycorrhizal structures indicating its pronounced role in the mycorrhizal interface. Inhibition of trehalase activity arrested the growth of both symbiotically grown protocorms and trehalose-supported axenic protocorms. Since trehalose constitutes only an inconsiderable part of the endogenous saccharide spectrum of orchids, degradation of fungal trehalose likely takes place in orchid mycorrhiza. Our results strongly support the neglected view of the fungal trehalose, or the glucose produced by its cleavage as compounds transported from fungi to orchids to ensure carbon and energy flow. Therefore, we suggest that not only amino acids, but also soluble carbohydrates are transported. We may propose that the soluble carbohydrates would be a better source of energy for plant metabolism than amino acids, which is partially supported by our finding of the essential role of trehalase.
兰花依赖菌根共生,尤其是在菌异养原球茎阶段,原球茎依赖真菌提供碳和能量。碳从真菌向兰花的转移已有充分记录,但确保这种转移的化合物的身份仍不清楚。已经获得了一些关于氨基酸作用的证据,但也有关于可溶性碳水化合物(可能是海藻糖,一种丰富的真菌碳水化合物)作用的模糊且被忽视的证据。因此,我们专注于海藻糖在碳和能量转移中的可能作用。我们使用多种培养方法、高效液相色谱、海藻糖酶特异性抑制剂的应用以及海藻糖酶活性的组织化学定位,对常见的沼泽兰花()及其共生真菌 sp. 进行了研究。我们发现,无菌培养的兰花原球茎拥有一条高效的、依赖海藻糖酶的代谢途径来利用外源海藻糖,海藻糖作为碳和能量的来源,其效果与它们主要的内源性可溶性碳水化合物一样好。这与非兰花植物不能如此程度地利用海藻糖形成对比。在共生培养的原球茎和成年兰花的根中,海藻糖酶活性与菌根结构紧密共定位,表明其在菌根界面中发挥着显著作用。抑制海藻糖酶活性会阻止共生培养的原球茎和海藻糖支持的无菌原球茎的生长。由于海藻糖仅占兰花内源性糖类谱的一小部分,真菌海藻糖的降解可能发生在兰花菌根中。我们的结果有力地支持了被忽视的关于真菌海藻糖或其裂解产生的葡萄糖作为从真菌运输到兰花以确保碳和能量流动的化合物的观点。因此,我们认为不仅氨基酸,而且可溶性碳水化合物也会被运输。我们可以提出,可溶性碳水化合物作为植物代谢的能量来源可能比氨基酸更好,我们关于海藻糖酶重要作用的发现部分支持了这一点。