P. Bonfante et S. Perotto, TANSLEY-REVIEW NO-82 - STRATEGIES OF ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI WHEN INFECTING HOST PLANTS, New phytologist, 130(1), 1995, pp. 3-21
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are ancient Zygomycetes, thought to
have colonized the first land plants; today, they are associated with
the roots of about 80% of plant species. The symbiosis they form is po
tentially valuable not only for developmental programmes based on low-
input agriculture, but also as a complex experimental model, where bot
h fungal and host plant growth are regulated. Here we review some rece
nt progress in the area of cell and molecular biology of arbuscular my
corrhizas. Particular attention is given to strategies followed by AM
fungi when, as obligate biotrophs, they establish a successful symbios
is with their host plants. Four topics are analysed: (i) parameters co
ntrolling fungal growth in the absence and presence of the host root,
i.e. events of DNA replication and timing of the cell cycle; (ii) mech
anical and enzymatic mechanisms which allow the fungus to colonize roo
t tissues, maintaining host viability; (iii) morphological changes ind
uced by AM fungi in host cells and, in particular, the formation de no
vo of a subcellular compartment termed the interface, and (iv) modific
ations of plant gene expression during fungal colonization, including
those involving structural, symbiotic and defence-related genes.