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Multimodal correlative imaging 1 and modelling of phosphorus 2 uptake from soil by hyphae of mycorrhizal fungi

Authors :
Keyes, Samuel D
Van Veelen, Arjen
Mckay Fletcher, Daniel
Scotson, Callum
Koebernick, Nicolai
Petroselli, Chiara
Williams, Katherine
Ruiz, Siul Aljadi
Cooper, Laura
Mayon, Robert B
Duncan, Simon
Dumont, Marc
Jakobsen, Iver
Oldroyd, Giles
Tkacz, Andrzej
Poole, Philip
Mosselmans, Fred
Borca, Camelia
Huthwelker, Thomas
Jones, David L.
Roose, Tiina
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• Phosphorus (P) is essential for plant growth. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) aid its uptake by acquiring sources distant from roots in return for carbon. Little is known about how AMF colonise soil pore-space, and models of AMF-enhanced P-uptake are poorly validated.• We used synchrotron X-ray computed tomography (SXRCT) to visualize mycorrhizae in soil, and synchrotron X-ray fluorescence (XRF/XANES) elemental mapping for phosphorus (P), sulphur (S) and aluminium (Al), in combination with modelling.• We found that AMF inoculation had a suppressive effect on colonisation by other soil fungi and identified differences in structure and growth rate between hyphae of AMF and nonmycorrhizal fungi. Results showed that AMF co-locate with areasof high P and low Al, andpreferentially associate with organic-type P species in preference to Al-rich inorganic P.• We discovered that AMF avoid Al-rich areas as a source of P. S-rich regions correlated with higher hyphal density and an increased organic-associated P-pool, whilst oxidized S-species were found close to AMF hyphae. Increased S oxidation close to AMF suggested the observed changes were microbiome-related. Our experimentally-validated model led to an estimate of P-uptake by AMF hyphae that is an order of magnitude lower than rates previously estimated; a result with significant implications for modelling of plant-soil-AMF interactions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......348..38c0e2940c080b5d1ab1d91fa551bf5a