Isozyme expression of nutrient-mobilizing and defence-related enzymes
were examined in different functional
components of intact Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) ectomycorrhizal
root systems developed in natural
unsterilized forest humus. Scots pine seedlings colonized by
Suillus bovinus (L. ex Fr.) O. Kuntze or Paxillus
involutus (Batsch ex Fr.) strains were grown on humus in two-dimensional
Perspex[target] microcosms to allow
development of complete ectomycorrhizal root systems. Soluble proteins
from uncolonized short roots, whole
mycorrhizal root tips or dissected mantle and core fractions, fungal
strands and the outermost soil colonizing fine
hyphae were subjected to native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and
stained
to detect esterase, acid
phosphatase, peroxidase and different polyphenoloxidase isozyme activities.
Tissue-specific esterase isozymes
were detected in all components and most, including unique Hartig net
isozymes, were of fungal origin. High
fungal acid phosphatase activities were detected in mycorrhiza and fine
hyphae
of S. bovinus, supporting earlier
findings of active phosphatase activity at the fungal interface in the
Hartig net region and in the fine hyphal
margins of extramatrical mycelium actively colonizing the humus. All compartments
in the P. involutus mycorrhizosphere had weaker acid-phosphatase
activities.
Peroxidases formed a large part of the soluble-protein
content in non-mycorrhizal short roots. The amount of peroxidases, on a
tissue f. wt basis, was similar in
mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal roots, but differential isozyme
expression was detected, indicating a change in
root peroxidase activities following mycorrhiza formation. The expression
of DL-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine
metabolizing polyphenol oxidase enzymes was reduced in mycorrhizas compared
with non-mycorrhizal short roots. In the extramatrical mycelial components,
fine hyphae expressed the highest polyphenoloxidase activity. P.
involutus displayed some polyphenol-oxidizing isoenzymes not detected
in
S. bovinus systems. Laccase activity was
not detected in the plant and fungal components examined. It is
concluded that enzyme activities and isozyme
expression are differentially regulated in the different functional
components of Scots pine mycorrhizospheres.