Open Access
Nature Communications, volume 8, issue 1, publication number 14245
Carbon translocation from a plant to an insect-pathogenic endophytic fungus
Scott W Behie
1
,
Camila C. Moreira
2
,
Irina Sementchoukova
1
,
Larissa Barelli
1
,
Paul M Zelisko
3
,
Michael J. Bidochka
1
1
Department of Biological Sciences, Brock University, Ontario
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2017-01-18
Journal:
Nature Communications
scimago Q1
SJR: 4.887
CiteScore: 24.9
Impact factor: 14.7
ISSN: 20411723
PubMed ID:
28098142
General Chemistry
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
Metarhizium robertsii is a common soil fungus that occupies a specialized ecological niche as an endophyte and an insect pathogen. Previously, we showed that the endophytic capability and insect pathogenicity of Metarhizium are coupled to provide an active method of insect-derived nitrogen transfer to a host plant via fungal mycelia. We speculated that in exchange for this insect-derived nitrogen, the plant would provide photosynthate to the fungus. By using 13CO2, we show the incorporation of 13C into photosynthate and the subsequent translocation of 13C into fungal-specific carbohydrates (trehalose and chitin) in the root/endophyte complex. We determined the amount of 13C present in root-associated fungal biomass over a 21-day period by extracting fungal carbohydrates and analysing their composition using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. These findings are evidence that the host plant is providing photosynthate to the fungus, likely in exchange for insect-derived nitrogen in a tripartite, and symbiotic, interaction. The endophytic fungusMetarhizium robertsiiis also an insect pathogen and can facilitate transfer of insect-derived nitrogen to host plants. Here, the authors show that carbon is transferred from plant to fungus suggesting a tripartite interaction where nitrogen is exchanged for photosynthate.
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