4.7 Article

Trichoderma atroviride-emitted volatiles improve growth of Arabidopsis seedlings through modulation of sucrose transport and metabolism

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages 1961-1976

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.14014

Keywords

Arabidopsis; root exudates; sucrose; sugar transporters; Trichoderma; volatile compounds

Categories

Funding

  1. Consejo de la Investigacion Cientifica UMSNH [CIC 2.26]
  2. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia [A1-S-17269, A1-S-34768]
  3. SEP-CONACYT [236825]

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The study found that fungal volatiles can increase endogenous sugar levels in plants, promote root growth and branching in Arabidopsis, and enhance the symbiotic relationship between plants and fungi. Additionally, fungal volatiles can specifically regulate the expression of a critical sucrose transporter in plants.
Plants host a diverse microbiome and differentially react to the fungal species living as endophytes or around their roots through emission of volatiles. Here, using divided Petri plates for Arabidopsis-T. atroviride co-cultivation, we show that fungal volatiles increase endogenous sugar levels in shoots, roots and root exudates, which improve Arabidopsis root growth and branching and strengthen the symbiosis. Tissue-specific expression of three sucrose phosphate synthase-encoding genes (AtSPS1F, AtSPS2F and AtSPS3F), and AtSUC2 and SWEET transporters revealed that the gene expression signatures differ from those of the fungal pathogens Fusarium oxysporum and Alternaria alternata and that AtSUC2 is largely repressed either by increasing carbon availability or by perception of the fungal volatile 6-pentyl-2H-pyran-2-one. Our data point to Trichoderma volatiles as chemical signatures for sugar biosynthesis and exudation and unveil specific modulation of a critical, long-distance sucrose transporter in the plant.

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