Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis is an association between obligate biotrophic fungi and more than 80% of land plants. During the pre-symbiotic phase, the host plant releases critical metabolites necessary to trigger fungal growth and root colonization. We describe the isolation of a semipurified fraction from exudates of carrot hairy roots, highly active on germinating spores of Gigaspora gigantea, G. rosea, and G. margarita. This fraction, isolated on the basis of its activity on hyphal branching, contains a root factor (one or several molecules) that stimulates, directly or indirectly, G. gigantea nuclear division. We demonstrate the presence of this active factor in root exudates of all mycotrophic plant species tested (eight species) but not in those of nonhost plant species (four species). We negatively tested the hypothesis that it was a flavonoid or a compound synthesized via the flavonoid pathway. We propose that this root factor, yet to be chemically characterized, is a key plant signal for the development of AM fungi.
The examination of several taxa from various tropical regions of the world, previously classified as Phyllanthus urinaria L., indicates that they do not belong to a single species. On the basis of morphology, cytology, genetics, and biometry, a new classification is presented in which the collective species P. urinaria, or “urinaria complex,” is elevated to the subsection level: Phyllanthus subsection Urinaria. Within the subsection, two subgroups may be recognized on the basis of seed coat ornamentation. Each of these lines is represented by two species which differ from each other in chromosome number: P. embergeri nov. spec. (2n = 100) and P. nozeranii nov. spec. (2n = 50) in the “spiraled” line, P. hookeri Muell. Arg. (2n = 100) and P. urinaria L. (2n = 50) in the “radiated” line. In the latter species, which has undergone diversification, two subspecies may be distinguished: P. urinaria urinaria and P. urinaria nudicarpus subspec. nova.
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