In vesicular–arbuscular mycorrhizal symbioses, specialized fungal structures (the arbuscules) are formed which
are in intimate contact with plant root cortical cells. It is assumed that these arbuscules are the major sites of solute
transfer between the plant and fungus, but there have been no studies that definitively show the extent or types
of transfer processes that occur in this structure. Phosphate is one of the major nutrients that is acquired by
mycorrhizal fungi and transferred to plants. In this study a single Lycopersicon esculentum cDNA was cloned and
shown to be identical to LePT1, a previously cloned inorganic-phosphate transporter. Expression studies revealed
that LePT1 transcript levels remained constant in mycorrhizal plants, but increased in phosphate-starved, non-mycorrhizal plants. Localization of the LePT1 transcript by in situ hybridization showed that this gene is highly
expressed in arbuscule-containing cortical cells in mycorrhizal plants. In non-mycorrhizal plants LePT1
expression was localized to the stele and cortex. The expression studies suggest that this transporter is involved
in phosphate nutrition of L. esculentum and its localization in cells that contain arbuscules indicate that it may be
the mechanism used by the plant to take up phosphate that is effluxed across the fungal plasma membrane of the
arbuscule. Based on our findings and those of others, an integrated model of inorganic phosphate uptake and
transfer in mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants is presented.