The dawn of symbiosis between plants and fungi

Author:

Bidartondo Martin I.12,Read David J.34,Trappe James M.56,Merckx Vincent7,Ligrone Roberto8,Duckett Jeffrey G.9

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK

2. Jodrell Laboratory, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew TW9 3DS, UK

3. Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK

4. Plant Biology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia 6009, Australia

5. Forest Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA

6. CSIRO, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia

7. Netherlands Centre for Biodiversity Naturalis, 2300RA Leiden, The Netherlands

8. Scienze Ambientali, Seconda Università di Napoli, 81100 Caserta, Italy

9. Department of Botany, Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, UK

Abstract

The colonization of land by plants relied on fundamental biological innovations, among which was symbiosis with fungi to enhance nutrient uptake. Here we present evidence that several species representing the earliest groups of land plants are symbiotic with fungi of the Mucoromycotina. This finding brings up the possibility that terrestrialization was facilitated by these fungi rather than, as conventionally proposed, by members of the Glomeromycota. Since the 1970s it has been assumed, largely from the observation that vascular plant fossils of the early Devonian (400 Ma) show arbuscule-like structures, that fungi of the Glomeromycota were the earliest to form mycorrhizas, and evolutionary trees have, until now, placed Glomeromycota as the oldest known lineage of endomycorrhizal fungi. Our observation that Endogone -like fungi are widely associated with the earliest branching land plants, and give way to glomeromycotan fungi in later lineages, raises the new hypothesis that members of the Mucoromycotina rather than the Glomeromycota enabled the establishment and growth of early land colonists.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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