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Plant Physiology 76:918-923 (1984)
© 1984 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Mycorrhizal Effects on Potassium Fluxes by Northwest Coniferous Seedlings 1

Paul T. Rygiewicz2 and Caroline S. Bledsoe

College of Forest Resources, AR-10, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195

In ectomycorrhizae, the relative abilities of mycobiont and host plant to take up and store inorganic nutrients are not easily determined due to the intimate physical relationship of the two components forming the association. Since compartmental analysis of solute elution can estimate cellular compartment pool sizes and unidirectional fluxes across membranes, we have used this method to study ectomycorrhizal coniferous roots. Rubidium-86, used as a tracer for potassium, was loaded into and eluted from intact roots of nonmycorrhizal and mycorrhizal (with the fungus Hebeloma crustuliniformme [Bull.: St. Amans Quél] Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii [Mirb.] Franco), western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla [Raf.] Sarg.) and Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis [Bong.] Carr.) seedlings.

Mycorrhizas significantly increased 86Rb uptake rates while decreasing the amount of 86Rb released to the external solution. Using compartmental analysis, the flux data suggest that the primary mycorrhizal effects were to increase inward potassium fluxes across the fungal tonoplast and to decrease potassium efflux across the fungal tonoplast, as compared with nonmycorrhizal seedling roots. The result was greater potassium storage, presumably in the fungal vacuole. The three coniferous species responded differently to fungal infection with respect to potassium fluxes. Both cytoplasmic and vacuolar fluxes for mycorrhizal hemlock were 2-fold greater than for spruce and 3-fold greater than for Douglas fir. These results demonstrate the usefulness of compartmental analysis for study of ion fluxes in intact mycorrhizal root systems and suggest that the fungal tonoplast may be the site for regulation of potassium fluxes in these coniferous roots.


2 Current address: Department of Plant and Soil Biology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720.

1 Supported by National Science Foundation Grant DEB 8004629 to C. S. Bledsoe.




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C. Corratge, S. Zimmermann, R. Lambilliotte, C. Plassard, R. Marmeisse, J.-B. Thibaud, B. Lacombe, and H. Sentenac
Molecular and Functional Characterization of a Na+-K+ Transporter from the Trk Family in the Ectomycorrhizal Fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum
J. Biol. Chem., September 7, 2007; 282(36): 26057 - 26066.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1984 by the American Society of Plant Biologists