Affiliation:
1. Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology University of Torino Viale Mattioli 25 10125 Torino Italy
2. Department of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences University of Torino Largo P. Braccini 2 10095 Grugliasco Italy
3. Max‐Planck‐Institut für Molekulare Pflanzenphysiologie Am Mühlenberg 1 14476 Potsdam‐Golm Germany
4. Istituto di Genomica Applicata Via J. Linussio 51 33100 Udine Italy
5. Department of Agricultural, Food, Environmental and Animal Sciences University of Udine Via delle Scienze 206 33100 Udine Italy
Abstract
Summary
Coffee is one of the most traded commodities world‐wide. As with 70% of land plants, coffee is associated with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, but the molecular bases of this interaction are unknown.
We studied the mycorrhizal phenotype of two commercially important Coffea arabica cultivars (‘Typica National’ and ‘Catimor Amarillo’), upon Funnelliformis mosseae colonisation grown under phosphorus limitation, using an integrated functional approach based on multi‐omics, physiology and biochemistry.
The two cultivars revealed a strong biomass increase upon mycorrhization, even at low level of fungal colonisation, improving photosynthetic efficiency and plant nutrition. The more important iconic markers of AM symbiosis were activated: We detected two gene copies of AM‐inducible phosphate (Pt4), ammonium (AM2) and nitrate (NPF4.5) transporters, which were identified as belonging to the C. arabica parental species (C. canephora and C. eugenioides) with both copies being upregulated. Transcriptomics data were confirmed by ions and metabolomics analyses, which highlighted an increased amount of glucose, fructose and flavonoid glycosides.
In conclusion, both coffee cultivars revealed a high responsiveness to the AM fungus along their root‐shoot axis, showing a clear‐cut re‐organisation of the major metabolic pathways, which involve nutrient acquisition, carbon fixation, and primary and secondary metabolism.
Cited by
7 articles.
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