Rhizophagus irregularis, the model fungus in arbuscular mycorrhiza research, forms dimorphic spores

Thumbnail image

Download files

DOI

https://doi: 10.1111/nph.19121

Language of the publication
English
Date
2023-07-11
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Kokkoris, Vasilis
  • Banchini, Claudia
  • Paré, Louis
  • Abdellatif, Lobna
  • Séguin, Sylvie
  • Hubbard, Keith
  • Findlay, Wendy
  • Dalpé, Yolande
  • Dettman, Jeremy
  • Corradi, Nicolas
  • Stefani, Franck
Publisher
New Phytologist Foundation / John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Abstract

Summary Rhizophagus irregularis is the model species for arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) research and the most widely propagated species for commercial plant biostimulants. Using asymbiotic and symbiotic cultivation systems initiated from single spores, advanced microscopy, Sanger sequencing of the glomalin gene, and PacBio sequencing of the partial 45S rRNA gene, we show that four strains of R. irregularis produce spores of two distinct morphotypes, one corresponding to the morphotype described in the R. irregularis protologue and the other having the phenotype of R. fasciculatus. The two spore morphs are easily distinguished by spore colour, thickness of the subtending hypha, thickness of the second wall layer, lamination of the innermost layer, and the dextrinoid reaction of the two outer spore wall layers to Melzer's reagent. The glomalin gene of the two spore morphs is identical and that of the PacBio sequences of the partial SSU-ITS-LSU region (2780 bp) obtained from single spores of the R. cf fasciculatus morphotype has a median pairwise similarity of 99.8% (SD = 0.005%) to the rDNA ribotypes of R. irregularis DAOM 197198. Based on these results, we conclude that the model AMF species R. irregularis is dimorphic, which has caused taxonomic confusion in culture collections and possibly in AMF research.

Subject

  • Nature and environment

Keywords

  • arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi,
  • morphology,
  • spore dimorphism,
  • vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizas,
  • dimorphisme des spores

Rights

Pagination

14 pages

Peer review

Yes

Identifiers

ISSN
1469-8137
0028-646X

Article

Journal title
New Phytologist
Accepted date
2023-06-10
Submitted date
2023-05-04

Citation(s)

Kokkoris, V., Banchini, C., Paré, L., Abdellatif, L., Séguin, S., Hubbard, K., Findlay, W., Dalpé, Y., Dettman, J., Corradi, N., & Stefani, F. (2023). Rhizophagus irregularis, the model fungus in arbuscular mycorrhiza research, forms dimorphic spores. New Phytologist (2023). https://doi: 10.1111/nph.19121

Download(s)

URI

Collection(s)

Plants and weeds

Full item page

Full item page

Page details

Date modified: