141 resultados para arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi
Resumo:
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are ecologically important root symbionts of most terrestrial plants. Ecological studies of AMF have concentrated on differences between species; largely assuming little variability within AMF species. Although AMF are clonal, they have evolved to contain a surprisingly high within-species genetic variability, and genetically different nuclei can coexist within individual spores. These traits could potentially lead to within-population genetic variation, causing differences in physiology and symbiotic function in AMF populations, a consequence that has been largely neglected. We found highly significant genetic and phenotypic variation among isolates of a population of Glomus intraradices but relatively low total observed genetic diversity. Because we maintained the isolated population in a constant environment, phenotypic variation can be considered as variation in quantitative genetic traits. In view of the large genetic differences among isolates by randomly sampling two individual spores, <50% of the total observed population genetic diversity is represented. Adding an isolate from a distant population did not increase total observed genetic diversity. Genetic variation exceeded variation in quantitative genetic traits, indicating that selection acted on the population to retain similar traits, which might be because of the multigenomic nature of AMF, where considerable genetic redundancy could buffer the effects of changes in the genetic content of phenotypic traits. These results have direct implications for ecological research and for studying AMF genes, improving commercial AMF inoculum, and understanding evolutionary mechanisms in multigenomic organisms.
Effect of segregation and genetic exchange on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in colonization of roots.
Resumo:
Résumé Les champignons endomycorhiziens arbusculaires (CEA) forment des symbioses avec la plupart des plantes terrestres. Les CEA influencent la croissance des plantes et la biodiversité. Ils sont supposés avoir évolué de manière asexuée pendant au moins 400 millions d'années et aucune diversification morphologique majeure n'a été constatée. Pour ces raisons, les CEA sont considérés comme d'anciens asexués. Très peu d'espèces sont connues actuellement. Les individus de ces champignons contiennent des noyaux génétiquement différents dans un cytoplasme continu. La signification évolutive, la variabilité et la maintenance des génomes multiples au sein des individus sont inconnues. Ce travail a démontré qu'une population du CEA Glomus intraradices est génétiquement très variable. Nous avons conclu que les plantes hôtes plutôt que la différenciation géographique devraient être responsables de cette grande diversité. Puis nous avons cherché l'existence de recombinaison entre génotypes dans une population. Nous avons détecté un groupe recombinant au sein de la population, ce qui met en doute l'état d'anciens asexués des CEA. Nous avons également détecté l'occurrence de fusions d'hyphes et l'échange de noyaux entre isolats génétiquement différents. La descendance hybride issue de cet échange était viable et distincte phénotypiquement des isolats parentaux. En résumé, ce travail identifie des événements cruciaux dans le cycle de vie des CEA qui ont le potentiel d'influencer l'évolution de génomes multiples. L'étude des conséquences de ces événements sur les interactions avec les plantes hôtes pourrait éclaircir significativement la compréhension de la symbiose entre plantes et CEA. Abstract Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are important symbionts of most land plants. AMF influence plant growth and biodiversity. Very few extant species are described. AMF are thought to have evolved asexually for at least 400 million years and no major morphological diversification has occurred. Due to these reasons, they were termed `ancient asexuals'. Fungal individuals harbour genetically different nuclei in a continuous cytoplasm. The variability, maintenance and evolutionary significance of multiple genomes within individuals are unknown. This work showed that a population of the AMF Glomus intraradices harbours very high genetic diversity. We concluded that host plants rather than geographic differentiation were responsible for this diversity. Furthermore, we investigated whether recombination occurred among genotypes of a G. intraradices population. The identification of a core group of recombining genotypes in the population refutes the assumption of ancient asexuality in AMF. We found that genetically different isolates can form hyphal fusions and exchange nuclei. The hybrid progeny produced by the exchange was viable and phenotypically distinct from the parental isolates. Taken together, this work provided evidence for key events in the AMF life cycle, that influence the evolution of multiple genomes. Studying the consequences of these events on the interaction with host plants may significantly further the understanding of the AMF-plant symbiosis.
Resumo:
Ancient asexuals directly contradict the evolutionary theories that explain why organisms should evolve a sexual life history. The mutualistic, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are thought to have been asexual for approximately 400 million years. In the absence of sex, highly divergent descendants of formerly allelic nucleotide sequences are thought to evolve in a genome. In mycorrhizal fungi, where individual offspring receive hundreds of nuclei from the parent, it has been hypothesized that a population of genetically different nuclei should evolve within one individual. Here we use DNA-DNA fluorescent in situ hybridization to show that genetically different nuclei co-exist in individual arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. We also show that the population genetics techniques used in other organisms are unsuitable for detecting recombination because the assumptions and underlying processes do not fit the fungal genomic structure shown here. Instead we used a phylogenetic approach to show that the within-individual genetic variation that occurs in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi probably evolved through accumulation of mutations in an essentially clonal genome, with some infrequent recombination events. We conclude that mycorrhizal fungi have evolved to be multi-genomic.
Resumo:
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) form extremely important mutualistic symbioses with most plants. Their role in nutrient acquisition, plant community structure, plant diversity, and ecosystem productivity and function has been demonstrated in recent years. New findings on the genetics and biology of AMF also give us a new picture of how these fungi exist in ecosystems. In this article, I bring together some recent findings that indicate that AMF have evolved to contain multiple genomes, that they connect plants together by a hyphal network, and that these different genomes may potentially move around in this network. These findings show the need for more intensive studies on AMF population biology and genetics in order to understand how they have evolved with plants, to better understand their ecological role, and for applying AMF in environmental management programs and in agriculture. A number of key features of AMF population biology have been identified for future studies and most of these concern the need to understand drift, selection, and genetic exchange in multigenomic organisms, a task that has not previously presented itself to evolutionary biologists.
Resumo:
In the ecologically important arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), Sod1 encodes a functional polypeptide that confers increased tolerance to oxidative stress and that is upregulated inside the roots during early steps of the symbiosis with host plants. It is still unclear whether its expression is directed at scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by the host, if it plays a role in the fungus-host dialogue, or if it is a consequence of oxidative stress from the surrounding environment. All these possibilities are equally likely, and molecular variation at the Sod1 locus can possibly have adaptive implications for one or all of the three mentioned functions. In this paper, we analyzed the diversity of the Sod1 gene in six AMF species, as well as 14 Glomus intraradices isolates from a single natural population. By sequencing this locus, we identified a large amount of nucleotide and amino acid molecular diversity both among AMF species and individuals, suggesting a rapid divergence of its codons. The Sod1 gene was monomorphic within each isolate we analyzed, and quantitative PCR strongly suggest this locus is present as a single copy in G. intraradices. Maximum-likelihood analyses performed using a variety of models for codon evolution indicated that a number of amino acid sites most likely evolved under the regime of positive selection among AMF species. In addition, we found that some isolates of G. intraradices from a natural population harbor very divergent orthologous Sod1 sequences, and our analysis suggested that diversifying selection, rather than recombination, was responsible for the persistence of this molecular diversity within the AMF population.
Resumo:
This study aimed to evaluate the impact of genetically modified (GM) wheat with introduced pm3b mildew resistance transgene, on two types of root-colonizing microorganisms, namely pseudomonads and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). Our investigations were carried out in field trials over three field seasons and at two locations. Serial dilution in selective King's B medium and microscopy were used to assess the abundance of cultivable pseudomonads and AMF, respectively. We developed a denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) method to characterize the diversity of the pqqC gene, which is involved in Pseudomonas phosphate solubilization. A major result was that in the first field season Pseudomonas abundances and diversity on roots of GM pm3b lines, but also on non-GM sister lines were different from those of the parental lines and conventional wheat cultivars. This indicates a strong effect of the procedures by which these plants were created, as GM and sister lines were generated via tissue cultures and propagated in the greenhouse. Moreover, Pseudomonas population sizes and DGGE profiles varied considerably between individual GM lines with different genomic locations of the pm3b transgene. At individual time points, differences in Pseudomonas and AMF accumulation between GM and control lines were detected, but they were not consistent and much less pronounced than differences detected between young and old plants, different conventional wheat cultivars or at different locations and field seasons. Thus, we conclude that impacts of GM wheat on plant-beneficial root-colonizing microorganisms are minor and not of ecological importance. The cultivation-independent pqqC-DGGE approach proved to be a useful tool for monitoring the dynamics of Pseudomonas populations in a wheat field and even sensitive enough for detecting population responses to altered plant physiology.
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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are thought to have remained asexual for 400 million years although recent studies have suggested that considerable genetic and phenotypic variation could potentially exist in populations. A brief discussion of these multigenomic organisms is presented. (C) 2003 The Linnean Society of London.
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Two filamentous fungi with different phenotypes were isolated from crushed healthy spores or perforated dead spores of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (AMF) Scutellospora castanea. Based on comparative sequence analysis of 5.8S ribosomal DNA and internal transcribed spacer fragments, one isolate, obtained from perforated dead spores only, was assigned to the genus Nectria, and the second, obtained from both healthy and dead spores, was assigned to Leptosphaeria, a genus that also contains pathogens of plants in the Brassicaceae. PCR and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA-PCR analyses, however, did not indicate similarities between pathogens and the isolate. The presence of the two isolates in both healthy spores and perforated dead spores of S. castanea was finally confirmed by transmission electron microscopy by using distinctive characteristics of the isolates and S. castanea. The role of this fungus in S. castanea spores remains unclear, but the results serve as a strong warning that sequences obtained from apparently healthy AMF spores cannot be presumed to be of glomalean origin and that this could present problems for studies on AMF genes.
Resumo:
It has been known for some time that different arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) taxa confer differences in plant growth. Although genetic variation within AMF species has been given less attention, it could potentially be an ecologically important source of variation. Ongoing studies on variability in AMF genes within Glomus intraradices indicate that at least for some genes, such as the BiP gene, sequence variability can be high, even in coding regions. This suggests that genetic variation within an AMF may not be selectively neutral. This clearly needs to be investigated in more detail for other coding regions of AMF genomes. Similarly, studies on AMF population genetics indicate high genetic variation in AMF populations, and a considerable amount of variation seen in phenotypes in the population can be attributed to genetic differences among the fungi. The existence of high within-species genetic variation could have important consequences for how investigations on AMF gene expression and function are conducted. Furthermore, studies of within-species genetic variability and how it affects variation in plant growth will help to identify at what level of precision ecological studies should be conducted to identify AMF in plant roots in the field. A population genetic approach to studying AMF genetic variability can also be useful for inoculum development. By knowing the amount of genetic variability in an AMF population, the maximum and minimum numbers of spores that will contain a given amount of genetic diversity can be estimated. This could be particularly useful for developing inoculum with high adaptability to different environments.
Resumo:
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are among the most abundant symbionts of plants, improving plant productivity and diversity. They are thought to mostly grow vegetatively, a trait assumed to limit adaptability. However, AMF can also harbor genetically different nuclei (nucleotypes). It has been shown that one AMF can produce genotypically novel offspring with proportions of different nucleotypes. We hypothesized that (1) AMF respond rapidly to a change of environment (plant host) through changes in the frequency of nucleotypes; (2) genotypically novel offspring exhibit different genetic responses to environmental change than the parent; and (3) genotypically novel offspring exhibit a wide range of phenotypic plasticity to a change of environment. We subjected AMF parents and offspring to a host shift. We observed rapid and large genotypic changes in all AMF lines that were not random. Genotypic and phenotypic responses were different among offspring and their parents. Even though growing vegetatively, AMF offspring display a broad range of genotypic and phenotypic changes in response to host shift. We conclude that AMF have the ability to rapidly produce variable progeny, increasing their probability to produce offspring with different fitness than their parents and, consequently, their potential adaptability to new environmental conditions. Such genotypic and phenotypic flexibility could be a fast alternative to sexual reproduction and is likely to be a key to the ecological success of AMF.
Resumo:
More than 80 % of vascular plants in the world form symbioses with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). AMF supply plants with nutrients such as phosphate and nitrogen, and can also help the plants to take up water. Hence, the symbiosis can greatly influence the growth and the defence of plants. By modifying plant productivity and diversity, AMF are considered as keystone species in ecosystems, playing a role that ultimately affects many food webs. This is why mycorrhizal symbioses have been investigated for several decades by many research groups.¦However, a large part of the scientific research done on AMF symbiosis has focused on the interaction between one plant and one fungus. This situation is far from realistic, as in natural ecosystems, many different fungal strains and species are co-existing and interacting in a belowground network. The main goal of this PhD was to investigate first, the interaction occurring among different co-existing AMF depending on their genetic relatedness and second, the outcome of the interaction and their effects on associated species.¦We found that AMF genetic relatedness partly explains the interaction among AMF, and this was in agreement with theories made for completely different species. Briefly, we demonstrated that AMF isolates of the same species coexisted more easily when they were closely-related, whereas AMF from different species were more in competition in this case of high relatedness. We also demonstrated that coexistence and competition among AMF can mediate plant growth as well as herbivore behaviour, opening new insights in our understanding of AMF effects on ecosystem functioning.¦Overall, the results of the different experiments of this PhD highlight the necessity of using multiple AMF to understand their interactions. Even so, we demonstrated here that simple species richness is not enough to understand these interactions and genetic relatedness among the co-existing AMF is a parameter that must be taken into account.¦-¦Sur Terre, plus de 80 % des plantes vasculaires forment des symbioses avec des champignons endomycorhiziens à arbuscules (CEA). Ces CEA permettent aux plantes d'acquérir plus facilement des nutriments tels que des phosphates, des nitrates, ou simplement de l'eau. Ainsi, cette symbiose peut avoir un effet important à la fois sur la croissance mais aussi sur la défense des plantes. En modulant la productivité et la diversité des plantes, les CEA sont donc des espèces clefs dans l'écosystème. Leur présence peut avoir des répercussions sur l'ensemble des réseaux trophiques. C'est pourquoi de nombreuses équipes de recherches étudient ces symbioses mycorhizienes depuis plusieurs décennies.¦La plupart des études concernant ces symbioses se sont focalisées sur l'action d'une espèce de CEA sur une espèce de plante. Malheureusement, cette situation ne correspond pas à ce que l'on peut retrouver dans la nature, où de nombreuses souches et de nombreuses espèces de CEA coexistent et interagissent dans un réseau mycélien souterrain. Le principal but de cette thèse était d'étudier, premièrement les interactions entre les différent CEA en fonction de leur apparentement génétique, et deuxièmement, d'étudier l'effet de ces interactions fongiques sur l'écologie des espèces associées.¦Au cours des différentes expériences de cette thèse, nous avons démontré que l'apparentement génétique entre les CEA expliquait une part non négligeable de leurs interactions. En résumé, plus l'apparentement génétique entre des souches de CEA d'une même espèce sera grand, plus ces souches seront capables de coexister. En revanche, s'il s'agit d'espèces différentes de CEA, plus elles seront apparentées, plus la compétition sera grande entre elles. Nous avons également démontré que la coexistence et la compétition entre différents CEA peut modifier à la fois la croissance des plantes mais aussi le comportement de leur prédateurs, ce qui ouvre de nouvelles perspectives sur notre compréhension des effets des CEA dans le fonctionnement des écosystèmes.¦Globalement, les résultats de nos différentes expériences mettent en évidence la nécessité d'utiliser plusieurs souches ou espèces de CEA pour mieux comprendre leurs interactions. Quand bien même, nos expériences démontrent que le simple recensement du nombre d'espèces de CEA n'est pas suffisant pour comprendre les interactions et que l'apparentement génétique des CEA coexistants est un paramètre qui doit être pris en compte.
Resumo:
Les Champignons Endomycorhiziens Arbusculaires (CEA) forment une symbiose racinaire avec environ 80% des espèces connues de plantes vasculaires. Ils occupent une position écologique très importante liée aux bénéfices qu'ils confèrent aux plantes. Des études moléculaires effectuées sur des gènes ribosomaux ont révélé un très grand polymorphisme, tant à l'intérieur des espèces qu'entre celles-ci. Ces champignons étant coenocytiques et multinucléés, l'organisation de cette variabilité génétique intraspécifique pourrait avoir différentes origines. Ce travail se propose d'examiner l'organisation et l'évolution de cette variabilité. Sur la base de fossiles, l'existence des CEA remonte à au moins 450 millions d'années. Cette symbiose peut donc être considérée comme ancienne. Les premières données moléculaires n'indiquant pas de reproduction sexuée, une hypothèse fut élaborée stipulant que les CEA seraient des asexués ancestraux. La première partie de cette thèse (chapitre 2) met en évidence l'existence de recombinaison dans différents CEA mais montre également que celle-ci est insuffisante pour purger les mutations accumulées. La reproduction étant essentiellement asexuée, on peut prédire que les nombreux noyaux ont probablement divergé génétiquement. En collaboration avec M. Hijri nous avons pu vérifier cette hypothèse (chapitre 2). Dans le chapitre 3 j'ai cherché à comprendre si le polymorphisme était également présent dans une population naturelle du CEA Glomus intraradices au niveau intraspécifique, ce qui n'avait encore jamais été examiné. En comparant les empreintes génétiques d'individus obtenus chacun à partir d'une spore mise en culture, j'ai clairement démontré que d'importantes différences génétiques existent entre ceux-ci. Un résultat similaire, portant sur des traits quantitatifs d'individus de la même population, a été trouvé par A. Koch. Les deux études en ensemble montre que le polymorphisme génétique dans cette population est suffisamment grand pour être important au niveau écologique. Dans le chapitre 4, j'ai cherché a examiner le polymorphisme des séquences du gène BiP au sein d'un individu. C'est la première étude qui examine la diversité génétique du génome de CEA avec un autre marqueur que l'ADN ribosomique. J'ai trouvé 31 types de séquences différentes du gène BiP issu d'un isolat de G. intraradices mis en culture à partir d'une seule spore. Cette variation n'était pas restreinte à des zones sélectivement neutres du BiP. Mes résultats montrent qu'il y a un grand nombre de variants non-fonctionnels, proportionnellement au faible nombre de copies attendues par noyau. Ceci va dans le sens d'une partition de l'information génétique entre les noyaux.<br/><br/>Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are root symbionts with about 80% of all known species of vascular land plants. AMF are ecologically important because of the benefits that they confer to plants. Molecular studies on AMF showed that rDNA sequences were highly variable between species and within species. Because AMF are coenocytic and multinucleate there are several possibilities how this intraspecific genetic variation could be organized. Therefore, the organization and evolution of this variation in AMF were investigated in the present work. Based on fossil records the AMF symbiosis has existed for 450 Million years and is therefore considered ancient. First molecular data indicated no evident sexual reproduction and gave rise to the hypothesis that AMF might be ancient asexuals. The first part of this thesis (Chapter 2) shows evidence for recombination in different AMF but also indicates that it has not been frequent enough to purge accumulated mutations. Given asexual reproduction, it has been predicted that the many nuclei in AMF should diverge leading to genetically different nuclei. This hypothesis has been confirmed by an experiment of M. Hijri and is also included in chapter 2 as the results were published together. In chapter 3 I then investigated whether intraspecific genetic variation also exists in a field population of the AMF Glomus intraradices. Comparing genetic fingerprints of individuals derived from single spores I could clearly show that large genetic differences exist. A similar result, based on quantitative genetic traits, was found for the same population by A. Koch. The two studies taken together show that the genetic variation observed in the population is high enough to be of ecological relevance. Lastly, in chapter 4, I investigated within individual genetic variation among BiP gene sequences. It is the first study that has analyzed genetic diversity in the AMF genome in a region of DNA other than rDNA. I found 31 sequence variants of the BiP gene in one G. intraradices isolate that originated from one spore. Genetic variation was not only restricted to selectively neutral parts of BiP. A high number of predicted non-functional variants compared to a likely low number of copies per nucleus indicated that functional genetic information might even be partitioned among nuclei. The results of this work contribute to our understanding of potential evolutionary strategies of ancient asexuals, they also suggest that genetic differences in a population might be ecologically relevant and they show that this variation even occurs in functional regions of the AMF genome.
Resumo:
Résumé Les champignons endomycorhiziens arbusculaires (CEA) ont co-évolué avec les plantes terrestres depuis plus de 400 millions d'années. De nos jours, les CEA forment une symbiose avec les racines de la majorité des plantes terrestres. Les CEA sont écologiquement importants parce qu'ils influencent non seulement la croissance des plantes, mais aussi leur diversité. Les CEA sont des biotrophes obligatoires qui reçoivent leur énergie sous forme de glucides issus de la photosynthèse des plantes. En contrepartie, les CEA apportent à leurs hôtes du phospore. Les CEA croissent et se reproduisent clonalement en formant des hyphes et des spores. De plus, les CEA sont coenocytiques et multigénomiques; le cytoplasme d'un CEA contient des noyeaux génétiquement différents. De nombreuses études ont démontré que différentes espèces de CEA agissent différentiellement sur la croissance des plantes. Malgré une conscience de plus en plus forte de l'existence d'une variabilité intraspécifique, la question de savoir si les populations de CEA sont génétiquement variables a été largement négligée. Dans le Chapitre 2, j'ai cherché à savoir si une population de CEA provenant d'un seul champ possède une diversité génétique. Cette étude a mis en évidence une importante variation génétique et phénotypique au sein d'individus de la même population. Des différences au niveau de traits de croissance, héritables et liés à la valeur sélective, indiquent que la variation génétique observée entre isolats n'est pas entièrement neutre. Dans le Chapitre 3, je montre que les différences génétiques entre isolats de CEA d'une population provoquent de la variation dans la croissance des plantes. L'effet des isolats dépend des conditions environnementales et varie de bénéfique à parasitique. Dans le Chapitre 4, je montre que des traits de croissance de CEA varient significativement dans des environnements contrastés. J'ai détecté de fortes interactions entre différents génotypes de CEA et différentes espèces de plantes. Ceci suggère que dans un environnement hétérogène, la sélection pourrait localement favoriser différents génotypes de CEA, maintenant ainsi la diversité génétique dans la population. Les résultats de ce travail aident à mieux comprendre l'importance écologique de la variation intraspécifique des CEA. La possibilité de pouvoir cultiver des individus d'une population de CEA au laboratoire nous a permis une meilleure compréhension de la génétique de ces champignons. De plus, ce travail est une base pour de futures expériences visant à comprendre l'importance évolutive de la diversité intraspécifique des CEA. Abstract Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (A1VIF) have co-evolved with land plants -for over 400 million years. Today, AMF form symbioses with roots of most land plants and are ecologically important because they alter plant growth and affect plant diversity. AMF are obligate biotrophs, obtaining their energy in form of plant-derived photosynthates. In return,- they supply their host plants with phosphorous. These fungi grow and reproduce clonally by hyphae and spores. They are coenocytic and multigenomic, harbouring genetically different nuclei in a common cytoplasm. Many studies have shown different AMF species differentially alter plant growth. Despite the increasing awareness of intraspecific variability the question whether there is any genetic variation among different individuals of the same population has been largely neglected. In Chapter 2, we investigated whether there is genetic diversity in a field population of the AMF G. intraradices. This work revealed that large genetic and heritable phenotypic variation exists in this AMF population. Differences in fitness-related growth traits among isolates suggest that some of the observed genetic variation is not selectively neutral. In Chapter 3, we show that genetic differences among isolates from the same population also cause variation in plant growth. The isolate effects on plant growth depended on the environmental conditions and varied from beneficial to detrimental. In Chapter 4, fitnessrelated growth traits of genetically different isolates were significantly altered in contrasting environments. we detected strong AMF isolate by host species interacfions which suggests that in a heterogeneous environment selection could locally favour different AMF genotypes, thereby maintaining high genetic diversity in the population. The results of this work contribute to the understanding of the ecological importance of intraspecific diversity in AMF. The possibility of culturing individuals of an AMF field population under laboratory condition gave new insights into AMF genetics and lays a foundation for future studies to analyse the evolutionary significance of intraspecific genetic diversity in AMF.
Resumo:
Development of the mutualistic arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) symbiosis between most land plants and fungi of the Glomeromycota is regulated by phytohormones. The role of jasmonate (JA) in AM colonization has been investigated in the dicotyledons Medicago truncatula, tomato and Nicotiana attenuata and contradicting results have been obtained with respect to a neutral, promotive or inhibitory effect of JA on AM colonization. Furthermore, it is currently unknown whether JA plays a role in AM colonization of monocotyledonous roots. Therefore we examined whether JA biosynthesis is required for AM colonization of the monocot rice. To this end we employed the rice mutant constitutive photomorphogenesis 2 (cpm2), which is deficient in JA biosynthesis. Through a time course experiment the amount and morphology of fungal colonization did not differ between wild-type and cpm2 roots. Furthermore, no significant difference in the expression of AM marker genes was detected between wild type and cpm2. However, treatment of wild-type roots with 50 μM JA lead to a decrease of AM colonization and this was correlated with induction of the defense gene PR4. These results indicate that JA is not required for AM colonization of rice but high levels of JA in the roots suppress AM development likely through the induction of defense.