Tissue cultures of Nicotiana tabacum were utilized to investigate the mechanisms associated with host specificity and non-host incompatibility in mycorrhizal and pathogenic fungi. They were tested for expression of resistance to different species of mycorrhizal fungi and to a fungal pathogen of tobacco, Thielaviopsis basicola, by monitoring the production of callose, phenolic compounds and peroxidases in dual cultures. Tobacco cells reacted to the presence of all the mycorrhizal fungi with callose deposits, whereas callose was nearly always absent in tobacco cells inoculated with their pathogen T. basicola. The broad-host range ectomycorrhizal fungi Hebeloma crustuliniforme, Laccaria laccata and Suillus granulatus elicited less intense responses than did Hymenoscyphus ericae. The results obtained for phenolic production and peroxidase activity were consistently similar to those obtained for callose deposition. They showed that H. ericae, an endomycorrhizal symbiont of Ericaceae, was highly incompatible with tobacco cells and that the tobacco pathogen T. basicola did not elicit strong reactions in the cells of its host. In this paper, the possibility of utilizing callus cultures as a simple model system to study both the different degrees of compatibility and the early events of recognition between mycorrhizal fungi and their host or non-host plants is discussed.

Compatible and incompatible interactions between callus tissue and mycorrhizal or pathogenic fungi.

GIOVANNETTI, MANUELA;
1993-01-01

Abstract

Tissue cultures of Nicotiana tabacum were utilized to investigate the mechanisms associated with host specificity and non-host incompatibility in mycorrhizal and pathogenic fungi. They were tested for expression of resistance to different species of mycorrhizal fungi and to a fungal pathogen of tobacco, Thielaviopsis basicola, by monitoring the production of callose, phenolic compounds and peroxidases in dual cultures. Tobacco cells reacted to the presence of all the mycorrhizal fungi with callose deposits, whereas callose was nearly always absent in tobacco cells inoculated with their pathogen T. basicola. The broad-host range ectomycorrhizal fungi Hebeloma crustuliniforme, Laccaria laccata and Suillus granulatus elicited less intense responses than did Hymenoscyphus ericae. The results obtained for phenolic production and peroxidase activity were consistently similar to those obtained for callose deposition. They showed that H. ericae, an endomycorrhizal symbiont of Ericaceae, was highly incompatible with tobacco cells and that the tobacco pathogen T. basicola did not elicit strong reactions in the cells of its host. In this paper, the possibility of utilizing callus cultures as a simple model system to study both the different degrees of compatibility and the early events of recognition between mycorrhizal fungi and their host or non-host plants is discussed.
1993
Sbrana, Cristiana; Giovannetti, Manuela; Buiatti, Marcello; Storti, Em
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/30204
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