Ethylene Alleviates the Suppressive Effect of Phosphate on Arbuscular Mycorrhiza Formation

2016 
Phosphorus is one of the most important macronutrients required for plant growth. Plants have evolved many strategies for inorganic phosphorus (Pi) acquisition, including the symbiotic pathways, involving the formation of mycorrhiza. With regard to arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM), high Pi availability has long been known to negatively affect this association, although the underlying mechanism is unknown. In the present study, the interactive role played by ethylene and Pi in AM regulation was investigated in the tomato-Rhizophagus irregularis symbiosis. AM fungal colonization was analysed in epi, rin and NRO ethylene-responsive mutants under different Pi availability conditions, with a focus on the late stages of the interaction. Although Pi inhibited mycorrhizal parameters in the ethylene-insensitive rin mutant and wild-type cultivars, it did not alter the mycorrhization of the epi tomato mutant, which exhibits a constitutive ethylene-induced response. As with the colonization parameters, root ethylene content and the expression of AM-related and ethylene receptor 6 genes were inhibited by Pi in wild-type cultivars and rin mutants, but were unaffected or slightly activated in epi plants. The application of ethephon offsets the negative impact on the mycorrhizal development caused by the application of Pi. This compensation effect is dose dependent and was ineffective in the NRO mutant, which is more insensitive to the action of ethylene. Our results provide evidence that ethylene signalling negatively affects the suppressive effect of Pi on AM formation and suggests an overlap between this suppressive effect and the regulatory mechanism of Pi-starvation response pathway in plants mediated by ethylene.
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