First published online June 12, 2003; 10.1104/pp.102.019042
Plant Physiology 132:1540-1549 (2003)
© 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists
PLANTS INTERACTING WITH OTHER ORGANISMS
Symbiotic Status, Phosphate, and Sucrose Regulate the Expression of Two Plasma Membrane H+-ATPase Genes from the Mycorrhizal Fungus Glomus mosseae1
Natalia Requena*,
Magdalene Breuninger,
Philipp Franken and
Aurora Ocón
Physiological Ecology of Plants Department, Botanical Institute,
University of Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 1, 72076 Tübingen,
Germany (N.R., M.B., A.O.); and Max-Planck Institute for Terrestrial
Microbiology, Karl-von-Frisch Strasse, 35043 Marburg, Germany (P.F.)
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ABSTRACT
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The establishment of the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis results in a
modification of the gene expression pattern in both plant and fungus to
accomplish the morphological and physiological changes necessary for the
bidirectional transfer of nutrients between symbionts. H+-ATPase
enzymes play a key role establishing the electrochemical gradient required for
the transfer of nutrients across the plasma membrane in both fungi and plants.
Molecular analysis of the genetic changes in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
during symbiosis allowed us to isolate a fungal cDNA clone encoding a
H+-ATPase, GmPMA1, from Glomus mosseae (BEG12).
Despite the high conservation of the catalytic domain from
H+-ATPases, detailed analyses showed that GmPMA1 was
strongly related only to a previously identified G. mosseae ATPase
gene, GmHA5, and not to the other four ATPase genes known from this
fungus. A developmentally regulated expression pattern could be shown for both
genes, GmPMA1 and GmHA5. GmPMA1 was highly expressed during
asymbiotic development, and its expression did not change when entering into
symbiosis, whereas the GmHA5 transcript was induced upon plant
recognition at the appressorium stage. Both genes maintained high levels of
expression during intraradical development, but their expression was reduced
in the extraradical mycelium. Phosphate, a key nutrient to the symbiosis, also
induced the expression of GmHA5 during asymbiotic growth, whereas
sucrose had a negative effect. Our results indicate that different fungal
H+-ATPases isoforms might be recruited at different developmental
stages possibly responding to the different requirements of the life in
symbiosis.
The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis formed between the Glomeromycota
and the roots of most vascular plants is characterized by reciprocal nutrient
exchange between both symbiotic partners. The fungus receives up to 20% of the
photoassimilated carbon allocated by the plant to the root. In exchange, the
fungus improves plant mineral supply (mainly in phosphate) through the
external mycelium extending into the nutrient depletion area surrounding the
root (Jakobsen, 1995 ). A major
question in the study of the AM symbiosis is where and how this nutrient
exchange takes place. During presymbiosis, the spores of the fungus have poor
saprotrophic growth. In the absence of a host plant, limited growth is
sustained for up to 4 weeks but then ceases, although the spore remains alive.
No further development has been achieved in vitro in the absence of living
plant roots. However, some nutrient additives, albeit insufficient to provide
continuous growth, have been shown to be perceived
(Mosse, 1959 ;
Mosse and Phillips, 1971 ;
Hepper, 1979 ;
Mugnier and Mosse, 1987 ) and
even metabolized (Bago et al.,
1999 ). In the symbiotic interaction, however, the fungus enters
the inner cortical root cells to form specialized haustoria called arbuscules.
These are branched hyphae with a very thin wall, surrounded by apoplastic
space and by the periarbuscular membrane formed by invagination of the plant
plasma membrane. There is increasing evidence that phosphate, translocated
from the soil through the fungus, is downloaded at the arbuscule interface
where it is taken up by plant transporters
(Rosewarne et al., 1999 ;
Rausch et al., 2001 ). In
contrast, little is known about where the exchange of carbon takes place.
Inter- or intracellular hyphae (i.e. coils) formed in upper cortical cells may
be alternative locations for carbon exchange. There is also uncertainty as to
what form of carbon is transported at these interfaces. Several approaches
have indicated that glucose may be preferred over fructose or sucrose as
carbohydrate imported by the fungus from the apoplastic space
(Saito, 1995 ;
Shachar-Hill et al., 1995 ;
Solaiman and Saito, 1997 ;
Pfeffer et al., 1999 ). This is
then converted to lipid for transfer within the external mycelium
(Pfeffer et al., 1999 ;
Bago et al., 2002 ). There, it
serves to feed this side of the fungal colony that has limitations for the use
of externally supplied carbon sources similar to the early developmental phase
(Pfeffer et al., 1999 ). The
external mycelium itself is highly active for phosphate uptake, but other
mineral nutrients as well such as ammonium or nitrate from the soil solution
are also taken up (Jakobsen et al.,
1992 ; Johansen et al.,
1992 ,
1993 ;
Frey and Schüepp, 1993 ;
Tobar et al., 1994 ;
Bago et al., 1996 ). These
nutrients are then transported to the plant through the fungal hyphae to the
inner structures of the cortex.
It is known that phosphate and hexoses are usually translocated by means of
symporters. These are sustained by an electrochemical gradient in the plasma
membrane created by H+-ATPase enzymes. Therefore, an important role
has long been proposed for these H+-ATPases at both the plant and
the fungal symbiotic interfaces for either phosphate or carbon transport
(Smith and Smith, 1990 ;
Gianinazzi-Pearson et al.,
1991 ). In plants, H+-ATPases form a large gene family
that is either transcriptionally or/and posttranscriptionally regulated at
different stages of plant development. In barley (Hordeum vulgare),
Murphy et al. (1997 ) described
the first plant H+-ATPase to be differentially expressed in
response to mycorrhizal colonization. More recently, at least two
H+-ATPase isoforms have been identified in the interaction of
mycorrhizal fungi and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum;
Gianinazzi-Pearson et al.,
2000 ). By using -glucuronidase-fused promoter constructs,
these authors showed induction of these two isoforms in arbuscule-containing
cells.
In terms of fungal ATPases, Ferrol et al.
(2000 ) isolated five gene
fragments coding for homologs of H+-ATPases in G. mosseae
using degenerate primers to the catalytic domain. The authors suggested that a
H+-ATPase gene family existed in AM fungi, similar to the situation
in plants. There is, however, no information about the conditions that
modulate the expression of the genes coding for such isozymes or the
developmental stage and location where they are expressed. As a consequence,
there is no data about the role that these fungal H+-ATPases might
play in the nutrient transfer during symbiosis.
In this paper, we describe the isolation of a new H+-ATPase
gene, GmPMA1, that is highly expressed during the asymbiotic stage.
We also demonstrate the developmental and nutrient-mediated regulation of this
and another H+-ATPase gene, GmHA5, during the mycorrhizal
symbiosis.
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RESULTS
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Isolation of a New H+-ATPase Gene from G.
mosseae
During the screening for genes expressed at early developmental stages of
the AM fungal life cycle, a 570-bp cDNA fragment was found whose deduced amino
acid sequence displayed high homology to a H+-ATPase from the
Archaeon Methanococcus jannaschii, as well as to other
H+-ATPases from fungi and plants
(Requena et al., 2002 ). The
cDNA sequence also showed homology to the partial gene sequence
GmHA5, one of five H+-ATPases described for Glomus
mosseae (Ferrol et al.,
2000 ). It was much less similar to the other four
H+-ATPase genes described in the same paper. The alignment of the
nucleotide and the deduced amino acid sequences showed that the isolated cDNA
clone encoded a new isoform that was named GmPMA1. A dendrogram of sequence
similarity was created for the catalytic domain of all described G.
mosseae H+-ATPase isozymes as well as for several
H+-ATPases from other organisms
(Fig. 1A). The dendrogram
showed that the AM isoforms GmPMA1 and GmHA5 cluster together with other
H+-ATPases including the plant H+-ATPases chosen in the
analysis, as well as sequences from Archaea, red algae, and the basidiomycete
Uromyces fabae. In contrast, the isoforms GmHA1, -2, -3, and -4
cluster with sequences from ascomycete H+-ATPases. The amino acid
sequence alignment used to obtain this dendrogram showed that identical gaps
existed in the ascomycete sequences as in the four mycorrhizal sequences GmHA1
to -4 (data not shown).

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Figure 1. A, Dendrogram of distances of the catalytic domain from 22
H+-ATPase proteins. GmPMA1 and GmHA5 were aligned using the program
ClustalW to protein sequences of H+-ATPases from Brewer's yeast
(Saccharomyces cerevisiae; PMA1Sacer, P05030; PMA2Sacer, P19657),
Kluyveromyces lactis (PMA1Klula, P49380), Zygosaccharomyces
rouxii (PMA1Zygro, P24545), Candida albicans (PMA1 Canal,
P28877), Pichia angusta (PMA1 Pican, deduced from AF109913),
Neurospora crassa (PMA1 Neucr, P07038), Ajellomyces
capsulatus (PMA1 Ajeca, AAB53772); fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces
pombe; PMA1Schpo, P09627; PMA2Schpo, P28876), Pneumocystis
carinii (PnecaHA1, AAB06958), M. jannaschii (MetjaHA1,
deduced from U67563), U. fabae (UrofaHA1, CAA05841),
Arabidopsis (PMA6Arath, Q9SH76), wild tobacco (Nicotiana
plumbaginifolia; NicplHA1, A43637), tomato (Lycopersicon
esculentum; Lyce-sHA2, AAD55399) and to those deduced from the gene
fragments GmHA1 to GmHA5 (AJ133839AJ133843).
Evolutionary distances were calculated based on the Dayhoff PAM matrix using
the neighboring-joining method. Bootstrap values of 1,000 data resamplings are
indicated. A similar dendrogram was obtained using the program package PUZZLE.
B, PCR amplification on genomic DNA from G. mosseae with
primers that amplify a similar region in the catalytic domain of
H+-ATPases. Primers were designed based on the published sequences
for GmHA1 to GmHA5 (AJ133839AJ133843) and in the
sequence of the new isolated gene GmPMA1 (AY149918).
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With the aim of isolating the complete genomic sequence coding for the
whole H+-ATPase family, a PCR screening was performed on both
genomic DNA and on a genomic library from G. mosseae
(Hosny et al., 1999 ). Specific
primers for genes GmHA1 to GmHA5 as well as for
GmPMA1 were used. Surprisingly, only genes coding for the GmPMA1 and
GmHA5 isoforms were present in G. mosseae genomic DNA
(Fig. 1B). A low-stringency
screening of the genomic library using the GmPMA1 original cDNA clone
allowed the isolation of three clones of approximately 11 kb, which, after
restriction analysis and partial sequencing, were identical to the gene
encoding the isoform GmPMA1 (data not shown).
RACE successfully yielded the full-length cDNA clones encoding GmPMA1 and
GmHA5, whose sequence were deposited in the National Center for Biotechnology
Information database (accession nos. AY149918 and AY193825). An alignment of
the deduced amino acid sequences demonstrated that both cDNAs code for
different H+-ATPases isoforms with an overall similarity higher
than 75% (Fig. 2). The GmPMA1-
and GmHA5-deduced proteins have a molecular mass of approximately 105 and 100
kD, respectively, similar to other described H+-ATPases. They
contain 10 putative transmembrane domains characteristic of P-type
H+-ATPases with the catalytic domain including the E1-E2
phosphorylation site at the beginning of the large cytoplasmic loop
(Fig. 2). The Prosite analysis
of the GmPMA1-deduced protein showed also the presence of a Leu-zipper pattern
with a probability of 7.006e-05 (Falquet et
al., 2002 ) stretching between the middle of the last two
transmembrane domains (Fig.
2).

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Figure 2. Amino acid alignment of the deduced proteins GmPMA1 (942 amino acids) and
GmHA5 (917 amino acids). Conserved amino acids are marked in gray. The overall
similarity between the two sequences is over 75%. The predicted 10
transmembrane helices of both proteins are boxed. The second cytoplasmic loop
contains the catalytic domain with the E1-E2 ATPase phosphorylation site
(DKTGTMT in GmPMA1; DKTGTLT in GmHA5) in bold. A Leu zipper motif stretching
between the last two transmembrane domains and facing outside of the membrane
was also found in GmPMA1, and it is also marked in bold.
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Development Regulates Expression of the G. mosseae
H+-ATPases
Given that the gene coding for the GmPMA1 isozyme was found in a
differential screening of different stages of the fungal life cycle, we were
interested in how GmPMA1 and GmHA5 were regulated during
development. RNA was extracted from germinated sporocarps (12 d old), from
mycorrhizal roots (2-month-old plants), and from extraradical hyphae from
those plants. Equal amounts of total RNA from sporocarps and hyphae and five
times more of total RNA from mycorrhizal roots were used to synthesize
single-stranded (ss) cDNA (Fig.
3A). The primers VAGLO and VANS1, amplifying a fragment from the
G. mosseae 18S rRNA, were used to assess that all three ss cDNA
samples contained equivalent amounts of fungal cDNA
(Fig. 3B). RT-PCR analyses with
specific primers for GmPMA1 and GmHA5 on these ss cDNAs
showed that the gene GmPMA1 was highly and preferentially expressed
during asymbiotic growth but was down-regulated during the symbiotic phase
(about 5- to 7-fold reduction; Fig.
3C). However, the gene coding for the isozyme GmHA5 showed a
contrasting expression pattern with very low expression during non-symbiotic
growth and highly induced expression (50-fold induction) in mycorrhizal roots
and extraradical hyphae (8-fold induction).

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Figure 3. Expression of GmPMA1 and GmHA5 H+-ATPases from
G. mosseae during different life cycle stages. A,
Northern-blot calibration of RNA from the samples used to synthesize the ss
cDNA hybridized with a DIG probe containing part of the rRNA genes from
Glomus mosseae (H, extraradical hyphae; S1, germinated sporocarps;
M1, mycorrhizal roots). B, Calibration by PCR of fungal cDNA present in the ss
cDNA synthesized from samples S1, H, and M1. The oligonucleotides VAGLO and
VANS1 specific for the 18S rRNA gene from G. mosseae were
used as primers. One microliter of a 1:10,000 dilution of the ss cDNA was used
as template in 28, 30, and 32 cycles of PCR. C, Reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR
expression pattern of both H+-ATPase genes during presymbiosis
(S1), extraradical hyphae (H), and mycorrhizal roots (M1). One microliter of
cDNA was used as a template in all cases.
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To determine at which point during symbiosis the GmHA5 was
induced, we analyzed the expression of both H+-ATPase genes in
germinated sporocarps during appressorium formation. Parsley (Petroselinum
crispum) seedlings were used as a host, and both symbionts were kept
together between two celophane membranes for 10 d. By this time, a large
number of appressoria were formed. Plant-triggered sporocarps (induced) were
compared versus control sporocarps (noninduced). The expression analysis at
this stage showed that although there was no change in the expression level of
GmPMA1 after contacting the host plant, strong induction of
GmHA5 took place (almost 12-fold;
Fig. 4A). Despite the small
possible amount of fungal material inside the root at this time, the
expression of both genes was already detectable in these roots where
appressoria were formed (early mycorrhizal roots). At this stage,
GmPMA1 was still more highly expressed than GmHA5 (almost
three times).

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Figure 4. A, RT-PCR expression of GmPMA1 and GmHA5
H+-ATPase genes at the appressoria formation stage. C, Water
control; NI, noninduced G. mosseae sporocarps; I, induced
G. mosseae sporocarps; EM, early mycorrhizal roots). B,
RT-PCR expression analysis of GmPMA1 and GmHA5
H+-ATPases during a time course of plant colonization. The top
panel shows the trypan blue staining of parsley roots colonized by G.
mosseae at 15, 20, 23, and 28 dpi. Although at 15 dpi, only
appressoria can be observed on the rhizodermis, further colonization of the
cortex can be seen at later time points. The bottom panel shows the expression
of both genes at the different time points and the number of PCR cycles used.
Relative expression levels were as follows: GmPMA1, 15 dpi = 0.12; 20
dpi = 0.20; 23 dpi = 0.30; 28 dpi = 0.30. GmHA5, 15 dpi = 0.04; 20
dpi = 0.20; 23 dpi = 0.33; 28 dpi = 0.31.
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A time-course experiment of mycorrhizal colonization showed how progression
of fungal development inside the root cortex affected expression of both
H+-ATPase genes. Parsley seedlings collected after 15, 20, 23, and
28 d postinoculation (dpi) with G. mosseae were used for this
experiment. Results showed that although very few fungal structures were
visible at 15 dpi (basically only multiple appressoria on the epidermal cells;
Fig. 4A), expression of
GmHA5 is already clearly detectable. As infection progressed and
Paris-type development was observed (see pictures in
Fig. 4B), the level of GmHA5
expression increased, and both genes were expressed at comparable levels
(Fig. 4B).
Phosphate and Sucrose Regulate the Expression of the GmHA5
H+-ATPase Gene during Asymbiosis
We addressed the question of whether some of the more relevant nutrients in
the mycorrhizal symbiosis are able to be perceived and alter the expression of
the fungal H+-ATPase genes during asymbiosis. Germinated sporocarps
of G. mosseae were exposed to phosphate, Glc, or Suc for 48 h. RT-PCR
analyses showed that minute amounts (35 µM) of potassium
phosphate induced expression of GmHA5 (about 5-fold) but had no
significant effect on expression of GmPMA1
(Fig. 5A). Potassium sulfate
did not increase expression of GmHA5, demonstrating a
phosphate-specific effect. Glc did not have any noticeable effect on the
expression of either H+-ATPase, but Suc had a marked inhibitory
effect on expression of GmHA5 (approximately 5-fold reduction;
Fig. 5B). The expression
analysis of a G. mosseae ortholog of the high-affinity phosphate
transporter GvPT (Harrison and
van Buuren, 1995 ) isolated in this work showed that its basal
level of expression was not affected by the addition of phosphate to the
medium nor was it affected by the presence of the host plant
(Fig. 5C).

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Figure 5. A, RT-PCR expression analysis of GmPMA1 and GmHA5
H+-ATPase genes during presymbiosis induced or not with 35
µM K2HPO4 (±PO4) or with
K2SO4 (±SO4). B, RT-PCR expression of
GmPMA1 and GmHA5 H+-ATPase genes during
presymbiosis induced or not with 25 mM Glc (±Glc) or 29
mM Suc (±Suc). C, RT-PCR expression of the phosphate
transporter GmPT in sporocarps induced or not with phosphate
(±PO4) or with the plant (NI, noninduced with the plant; I,
induced with the plant; EM, early mycorrhiza; expression of GmPT
inside the roots at the appressoria stage). The number of PCR cycles used is
indicated under each picture. Table
II shows the relative expression levels for each RT-PCR analysis
performed.
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DISCUSSION
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Plasma membrane H+-ATPases are key enzymes found in plants,
fungi, and algae and possibly in archaebacteria and protozoa, although the ion
specificity of the latter has not yet been proved
(Portillo, 2000 ). Their
function is to generate a proton electrochemical gradient across the plasma
membrane required for effective cellular function. Thus, it provides the
driving force for the uptake and efflux of ions and metabolites through an
interface otherwise impermeable to them and allows the control of
intracellular pH. The exchange of metabolites and ions across the plasma
membrane is particularly important at the symbiotic mycorrhizal interface
because it enables the control of exchanged nutrients between the
soil-fungus-plant "compartments." This maintains the equilibrium
that defines the association as mutualistic and not as parasitic. In plants,
H+-ATPases are encoded from a large multigene family, and their
expression is developmentally regulated in a cell- and tissue-specific manner
(Sze et al., 1999 ). Recently,
two of these isoforms have been shown to be specifically regulated during
mycorrhiza formation in tobacco
(Gianinazzi-Pearson et al.,
2000 ). Isozymes pma2 and pma4 were induced in
arbuscule-containing cells showing that the de novo H+-ATPase
activity in the periarbuscular membrane resulted from selective induction of
these two genes. Similarly, Ferrol et al.
(2002 ) showed changes in plant
H+-ATPase expression levels in tomato, not only in roots, but also
in leaves of mycorrhizal plants. In contrast, molecular database analysis
shows that most fungi contain only one or two genes encoding
H+-ATPases, and only one of them usually encodes the enzyme
responsible for the main plasma membrane ATPase activity. For example,
Brewer's yeast and fission yeast contain two ATPase genes
(de Kerchove d'Exaerde et al.,
1996 ). In contrast, the biotrophic rust fungus U. fabae
possesses only one gene, although different alleles are sometimes observed in
the dikaryotic phase (Struck et al.,
1998 ). In AM fungi, Ferrol et al.
(2000 ) isolated five different
fragments corresponding to five putative isoforms of H+-ATPase
using a PCR approach with degenerate primers on genomic DNA from G.
mosseae. They concluded that in AM fungi, H+-ATPases were
encoded by a multigene family as in plants. Using a suppressive subtractive
hybridization technique to identify transcriptionally regulated genes during
early stages of AM fungal development, we isolated a cDNA fragment from G.
mosseae with high homology to different H+-ATPases
(Requena et al., 2002 ). This
fragment was different from the five already described, and we therefore
isolated the full-length cDNA of this gene. The isolated transcript showed
higher homology to the gene coding for the isoform GmHA5 from G.
mosseae and to other P-type H+-ATPases from Archaea, fungi,
and plants. A bootstrap analysis using the highly conserved catalytic domain
from all known G. mosseae isozymes and 16 other related
H+-ATPases showed that GmHA5 and the new isolated form, named
GmPMA1, formed a separated cluster from the other four G. mosseae
isozymes. The latter showed a closer relation with ascomycete
H+-ATPase sequences. Specific primers designed to verify the
presence of the different isozymes in the genome of G. mosseae showed
that only genes coding for GmPMA1 and GmHA5 were present. Expression analysis
using cDNA from different fungal developmental stages confirmed this result
(data not shown). Therefore, we believe that only GmPMA1 and GmHA5
H+-ATPases belong to the fungus G. mosseae, although we do
not exclude that other yet unknown isozymes might exist. GmHA1, -2, -3, and -4
could belong to one of the associated ascomycetes that often cohabit within
spores of AM fungi (Redecker et al.,
1999 ). It is interesting that the catalytic domain from the AM
isoforms GmPMA1 and GmHA5 appear more closely related to those from plant
H+-ATPases than to the catalytic domain of the fungal isoforms.
Similar results were observed for U. fabae
(Struck et al., 1998 ). Both
the AM fungi and the rust fungus form biotrophic associations with their host
plant, and it is tempting to speculate about either horizontal gene transfer
or coevolution of the H+-ATPase genes between these fungi and
plants.
We showed that symbiosis formation and nutrition seem to be determinants of
the differential expression of the both G. mosseae
H+-ATPase isoforms, and therefore we can speculate that specific
isoforms might be differentially recruited at different developmental or
nutritional stages as happens in plants. GmPMA1 is highly expressed
during presymbiosis, whereas GmHA5 is expressed at very low levels at
this stage. Presymbiotic GmPMA1 expression was not affected by the
presence of different nutrients in the growth medium, nor by the presence of
the host plant. A lower level of expression occurred during the in planta
phase, but the expression dramatically dropped in the extraradical mycelium.
In contrast, GmHA5 was strongly induced once appressoria began to
form, and it remained highly expressed during the in planta phase. Its
expression was higher in the extraradical mycelium than in asymbiotic hyphae,
but levels were still low compared with those in planta.
GmHA5 expression was not only triggered by the host plant, but
also by micromolar amounts of phosphate in the medium. Lei et al.
(1991 ) described stimulation
of plasmalemma ATPase activity in Gigaspora margarita by the
exogenous addition of root factors. With the help of cytochemical localization
techniques, they showed an increase in H+-ATPase activity at the
hyphal root tip of stimulated hyphae and correlated this enhanced ATPase
activity to a stimulation in phosphate uptake. However, these authors
performed the plant induction experiment on a medium containing 35
µM KH2PO4, which we noted is sufficient to
produce an increase in GmHA5 expression even in the absence of the
plant. We tested whether induction of GmHA5 runs parallel to an
increase in the expression of a homolog of the high-affinity phosphate
transporter described for Glomus versiforme and for Glomus
intraradices (Harrison and van
Buuren, 1995 ;
Maldonado-Mendoza et al.,
2001 ). We showed that neither phosphate nor the presence of the
host plant triggered induction of the G. mosseae phosphate
transporter during the presymbiotic stage, but similar concentrations of
phosphate induced its expression in extraradical hyphae of both G.
intraradices (Maldonado-Mendoza et
al., 2001 ). A possible explanation is that during asymbiotic
growth, the basal expression level of the high-affinity phosphate transporter
could be enough to supply the limited fungal biomass with phosphate at this
stage. This is in agreement with results of Maldonado-Mendoza et al.
(2001 ) who showed a tight
regulation of the fungal high-affinity phosphate transporter related to the
existing phosphate needs of the symbiont. In contrast, the proton gradient
necessary for the cotransport of phosphate during presymbiosis would be
insufficient and hence the increased GmHA5 expression. In fact,
proton pumps have a very slow ion transport rate (approximately 100 ions
s1), in contrast to cotransporters (approximately
3001,000 ions s1), that has to be
compensated with protein abundance (Sze et
al., 1999 ).
Glc did not have any effect on the expression of either
H+-ATPase gene during presymbiosis, in contrast to what was
observed for plants and yeast (Mito et
al., 1996 ; Portillo,
2000 ). The effect of Glc on H+-ATPase gene expression
in other fungi has been found to be variable. Candida albicans and
U. fabae respond weakly to Glc, whereas Aspergillus nidulans
responds initially with a temporary slight increase but then a strong
down-regulation (Monk et al.,
1993 ; Struck et al.,
1996 ; Abdallah et al.,
2000 ). The Glc modulation of H+-ATPase expression has
been related to the metabolic state of the cell, with the involvement of the
Tuf/Rap1/Gcr1 transcription factors also involved in the control of glycolytic
genes (Capieaux et al., 1989 ;
Rao et al., 1993 ;
Scott and Baker, 1993 ). There
is evidence that a small proportion of Glc is taken up into the presymbiotic
mycelium of AM fungi after several days of incubation
(Shachar-Hill et al., 1995 ;
Bago et al., 1999 ), but its
significance to the growth of the fungus seems to be minor in contrast to the
breakdown of internal reserves. This could explain why no increase in
H+-ATPase protein is required, and therefore there is no change in
expression level.
In contrast, Suc down-regulated the expression of GmHA5 during
presymbiosis. This could be correlated with the negative effect of Suc on
G. mosseae growth reported both at presymbiosis
(Mosse, 1959 ) and in the
extraradical mycelium phase (Mugnier and
Mosse, 1987 ). Suc levels higher than 29 mM inhibit the
attachment of mycorrhizal hyphae to root surface and the formation of
symbiosis. However, it is possible that the amount of Suc used in these
experiments exceeded the physiological levels to which the fungus usually
meets in soil. The same could be true for the amount of Suc that the fungus
faces in the apoplast, given that all isolated plant high-affinity Suc
transporters have a Km in the range of 0.2 to 2
mM (Lemoine, 2000 ;
Weise et al., 2000 ). This
would explain why GmHA5 is not down-regulated during the in planta
phase but is up-regulated. The next challenge will be to ascertain the
localization and activity of both GmPMA1 and GmHA5 in the in planta phase and
their role in the carbon transport.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Strain and Culture Conditions
Isolation of Fungal Asymbiotic Material
Sporocarps from the AM fungus Glomus mosseae (BEG12) were
purchased from Biorize (Dijon, France) and surface-sterilized according to
Budi et al. (1999 ). Sporocarps
were germinated on MES-buffered water-agar plates as described elsewhere
(Requena et al., 1999 ) and
grown in an incubator at 25°C in the dark. After 12 d, the germinated
sporocarps were harvested using fine forceps to recover all hyphae and
immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. RNA from germinated sporocarps was
extracted as described below and used for expression experiments.
Isolation of Fungal Symbiotic Material
Parsley (Petroselinum crispum) plants were inoculated with
G. mosseae (BEG12) and grown in pots divided into
compartments separated by a thin nylon mesh (50 µm), which allowed the
passage of extraradical hyphae but not of roots
(Redecker et al., 1995 ). The
hyphal compartment contained 2-mm glass beads from which the extraradical
mycelium could be easily recovered. Plants were grown for 2 months in a
phytochamber under controlled conditions of light (150 µE
m2 s1), temperature
(20°C), and photoperiod (14 h of light). Extraradical hyphae were then
isolated from the glass bead compartment, washed several times in chilled
sterile distilled water, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Colonized roots free
of extraradical hyphae were also collected, washed, and immediately frozen in
liquid nitrogen. RNA from both extraradical hyphae and mycorrhizal roots was
extracted as described below. The experiment was conducted twice.
Developmental Expression of GmPMA1 and GmHA5
Expression of both H+-ATPase genes GmPMA1 and
GmHA5 was studied during different stages of mycorrhizal development.
It is then important that RNA from germinated sporocarps, mycorrhizal roots,
and extraradical hyphae contain equal amounts of fungal material. To balance
the amount of fungal RNA in the mycorrhizal root sample with the other two
samples, ss cDNA was synthesized using approximately five times more total RNA
in the mycorrhizal samples. Thus, 50 ng of total RNA from spores and hyphae
and approximately 250 ng of total RNA from mycorrhizal roots was used to
synthesize ss cDNA using hexamer oligonucleotides according to the protocol of
the Superscript II Reverse Transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). cDNA
amounts were estimated by PCR using the primers VAGLO and VANS1 that amplify a
200-bp fragment from the small ribosomal subunit (Simon et al.,
1992 ,
1993 ). One microliter from a
dilution 1:10,000 was used for the PCR, which was performed for 28, 30, and 32
cycles. Expression analyses with specific primers for the H+-ATPase
genes were then performed as described below.
Time-Course of Plant Colonization by G. mosseae
One hundred parsley seedlings were grown on 30-mL pots containing inoculum
of G. mosseae (BEG12) consisting of terra-green substrate
with sporocarps and mycorrhizal roots as propagules. The plants were grown as
described above, and the roots were harvested at 15, 20, 23, and 28 dpi. A
portion of the root was used for trypan blue staining
(Phillips and Hayman, 1970 ),
and the rest was used for RNA isolation and RT-PCR analysis (see below).
Appressorium Induction on Parsley Seedlings
Appressorium formation was triggered by bringing axenically germinated
sporocarps of G. mosseae (BEG12) into contact with parsley
seedlings between two cellophane membranes on water-agar plates. The plates
were kept at room temperature for 240 h, after which the fungal material was
carefully separated from the plant under the stereo-microscope. Fungus
(induced) and root (early mycorrhiza) were separately frozen in liquid
nitrogen. Non-triggered sporocarps maintained under the same growth conditions
were used as controls (noninduced). RNA was isolated from the three different
samples and used for RT-PCR analysis (see below).
Nutrient Effect on H+-ATPase Expression
Germinated sporocarps were transferred to water-agar plates buffered with
MES and containing the different nutrients tested. These were: 25
mM Glc, 29 mM Suc, 35 µM potassium
dihydrogen phosphate, or 17.3 µM potassium sulfate. Each of the
nutritional treatments had its respective water control consisting of
water-agar plates that were also MES buffered.
Isolation of GmPMA1 and GmHA5
A (570-bp) cDNA fragment with homology to several plasma membrane
H+-ATPases was isolated in a previous screening by suppressive
subtractive hybridization comparing presymbiotic fungal growth versus
extraradical hyphae (Requena et al.,
2002 ). Sequence comparison using the National Center for
Biotechnology Information database showed that this clone was a new isoform,
different from other previously identified from the same fungus
(Ferrol et al., 2000 ). The
corresponding full-length cDNA was obtained by RACE using the SMART RACE cDNA
amplification kit (BD Biosciences Clontech, Palo Alto, CA). Two nested PCR
reactions were performed on the SMART cDNA using two pairs of internal primers
based on the sequence of the original cDNA fragment
(Table I). Total RNA (100 ng)
extracted using the RNAeasy kit (Qiagen USA, Valencia, CA) from germinated
sporocarps was used as template. The PCR reactions were performed using the
proof-reading enzyme Advantage 2 (BD Biosciences Clontech). The obtained
fragments were cloned into the pCR2.1 TOPO vector and sequenced (MWG Biotech).
The new deduced isozyme was named GmPMA1. A similar procedure was employed to
isolate the full-length gene of the previously identified H+-ATPase
isozyme GmHA5.
View this table:
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Table I. List of the primers used in this work
Primers 1 to 8 were used for the RACE experiments with GmPMA1 and
GmHA5. Primers 9 to 16 were used to detect the presence of the other
four putative H+-ATPase isozymes in the genome of G.
mosseae. Expression experiments concerning GmPMA1 were performed
with primers 2 and 3, whereas primers 17 and 18 were used for GmHA5.
Expression analyses with GmPT were performed with primers 19 and
20.
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Database Comparison and Phylogenetic Analysis
Using the deduced amino acid sequence of the catalytic domain of the
H+-ATPases GmPMA1 and GmHA5, an alignment was carried out using the
program ClustalW (Thompson et al.,
1994 ) with data from the SWISSPROT and the GenBank databases.
Phylogenetic analysis was conducted with the program packages PHYLIP
(Phylogeny Inference Package, v3.573c, Department of Genetics, University of
Washington, Seattle) and PUZZLE (v4.02;
Strimmer and von Haeseler,
1996 ). On the basis of the results, a dendrogram was constructed
using the program TREEVIEW (Page,
1996 ). Accession numbers of the sequences used in the alignment
are given in the figure legend.
Detection of H+-ATPase Isoforms in G. mosseae
Genomic DNA
PCR amplification of a genomic segment located inside the catalytic domain
was used to prove the existence of the different H+-ATPase isoforms
in the genome of G. mosseae (BEG12; GmPMA1 from
this study and GmHA1 to GmHA5 previously identified by
Ferrol et al. [2000 ]). Genomic
DNA from 1,000 axenically germinated spores was isolated using the Qiagen
DNAeasy kit and PCR amplified with specific primers for each isozyme. The
primers were designed to amplify a fragment of similar length in the same area
based on the published sequences (GmHA1GmHA5) and on
the new isolated sequence (GmPMA1)
Table I. Southern-blot
screening of a genomic library (Hosny et
al., 1999 ) was performed using the original GmPMA1 cDNA
fragment as a probe under nonastringent conditions.
RT-PCR Expression Analyses
Total RNA from germinated sporocarps either induced or not with different
nutrients, appressorium stage fungus, extraradical hyphae, or mycorrhizal
plants was extracted using the RNAeasy kit (Qiagen USA) and DNase treated
using the DNase I enzyme from Promega (Madison, WI). RNA quality and quantity
was assessed by northern blot using a DIG probe containing the ribosomal genes
from G. mosseae (Franken
and Gianinazzi-Pearson, 1996 ). Identical amounts of RNA were used
to synthesize cDNA using oligo(dT) as primer according to the protocol of the
Superscript II Reverse Transcriptase (Invitrogen) to be used for the RT-PCR
experiments. Transcript levels for both H+-ATPases, GmPMA1
and GmHA5, were estimated by PCR using specific primers spanning an
intron, which detect possible genomic DNA contamination (see
Table I). The number of cycles
and the amount of template used were adjusted for every single experiment to
be on the exponential phase of the PCR as noted on each of the figures. A
G. mosseae ortholog of the high-affinity phosphate
transporter GvPT from Glomus versiforme
(Harrison and van Buuren,
1995 ) was isolated using primers from G.
versiforme designed in highly conserved regions. The PCR fragments
were cloned and sequenced, and specific primers for G.
mosseae were designed (Table
I). Expression of the G. mosseae phosphate
transporter (GmPT) was studied by RT-PCR in germinated sporocarps
induced or not with 35 µM of potassium dihydrogen phosphate for
48 h. GmPT expression was also assayed in germinated sporocarps
triggered by the host plant at the appressorium formation stage versus
non-triggered sporocarps as well as versus the expression of the GmPT
in the early mycorrhiza (see above). All RT-PCR products were quantified by
densitometric analysis of ethidium bromide-stained bands using the computer
program Quantity One (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). The values were
calculated as a ratio to the amount of RNA in each sample also determined
densitometrically. RT-PCR analyses were performed in duplicate on independent
samples.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We thank Drs. Uwe Nehls and Reinhard Fischer for critical comments on the
manuscript. Special thanks to Prof. P. Jeffries for proofreading our
manuscript.
Received December 12, 2002;
returned for revision January 11, 2003;
accepted March 4, 2003.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.102.019042.
1 The work was supported in part by structural funds from the University of
Tübingen. N.R. was supported by a Margarete von Wrangell Habilitation
Stipendium. 
*
Corresponding author; e-mail
natalia.requena{at}uni-tuebingen.de;
fax 497071295635.
 |
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