A model system was developed for the molecular analysis of
plant–mycorrhizal fungus interactions using Hordeum
vulgare cv. Galleon and Glomus intraradices Schenk and Smith. High
levels
of early-colonization stage mycorrhizas
(20–35% of the total root length) were routinely obtained in the
roots
of 12–14-d-old barley seedlings. Detailed
colonization studies showed that most colonization occurred in the first
5–10 lateral roots, and that colonization
in primary roots and younger lateral roots was low. Differential screening
of
a cDNA library prepared from the
highly colonized region of the root system and subsequent northern analyses
identified four differentially
expressed cDNA clones. Two clones, BMR6 and BMR78, detect RNA transcripts
that accumulate to much higher
levels in mycorrhizal roots than in non-mycorrhizal root tissues. DNA
hybridization analysis confirmed that both
of the clones were of plant rather than fungal origin. Hybridization and
sequence analysis strongly suggests that
BMR78 represents a partial cDNA of a low copy proton-ATPase gene. This
finding is consistent with the extensive proliferation of the periarbuscular
membrane and high ATPase activity associated with it. BM6 detects a low
copy
gene whose function is unknown.