We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Localization of the fungal symbiont (Chaetothyriales) in Ipomoea carnea.
- Authors
Pistán, María E.; Gutiérrez, Susana A.; Schnittger, Leonhard; Gardner, Dale R.; Cholich, Luciana A.; Gonzalez, Ana M.
- Abstract
Plants belonging to the genera Astragalus, Oxytropis, Ipomoea, Sida, and Swainsona often contain the toxin swainsonine (SW), which causes a neurological disorder in livestock. It has been demonstrated that SW is produced by a symbiont fungus associated with these plants. In I. carnea, the fungus belongs to the ascomycetes of the order Chaetothyriales and grows ectopically on the adaxial surface of leaves. In this study, the presence of the symbiont fungus in different organs of I. carnea was investigated using imaging techniques to understand the process of endophyte transmission. In I. carnea plants with whitish mycelia on the leaf surface, SW could be detected in seeds. Inside the seeds, the mycelium was located on the surface of the cotyledons and on the inner side of the seed coat. We corroborated that the presence of this fungus is a prerequisite for the presence of SW in I. carnea. The demonstration of the localization of the fungus within the seed strongly suggested that this endophyte is vertically transmitted. Our observations verified that the SW-producing fungus in I. carnea is an endosymbiont with epibiotic behavior.
- Subjects
IPOMOEA; SWAINSONINE; PLANT-fungus relationships; ASCOMYCETES; ASTRAGALUS (Plants)
- Publication
Botany, 2022, Vol 100, Issue 9, p729
- ISSN
1916-2790
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/cjb-2022-0033