Publications

  • PhD Thesis related to BGIV:ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL EFFECTS ON DROUGHT AND TRANSPLANT CUTTINGS. OLIVE (OLEA EUROPAEA VAR. M.) AND POMEGRANATE (PUNICA GRANATUM L. VAR. PLENA VOSS.) AS PLANT MODELS
    Bompadre María Josefina

    Drought is the main factor who causes reduction on plant growing. They have chemicals and hydraulic effects that affects most physiological and biochemical process on plants. Oxidative stress occurs when the redox status of the homeostasis inside the cells are altered. This desbalanced coud be caused by a overproduction of reactive oxygen species or by a deficiency of an antioxidant system. The contribution of the arbuscular mycorrhizal drought tolerancy results in a combination of physicals, nutritionals and physiological effects. A critical step for the application of AM technology is the appropiate selection of effectiveness fungal isolates to be utilized as inoculants. It was studied the effect of two Glomus intraradices strains from different in Vitro culture behavior, inoculated alone or toegether in olives and pomegranate cuttings, in transplant and drought conditions, evaluating growth and biochemical parameters, founding responses that was depending not only from the vegetal species utilized but from the conditions applied. Each Glomus strain had differential effect on the two model plants.

  • Phenol tolerance, changes of antioxidative enzymes and cellular damage in transgenic tobacco hairy roots colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
    Sabrina G. Ibáñez, María I. Medina, Elizabeth Agostini

    Phytoremediation has been recognized as a cheap and eco-friendly technology which could be used for the remediation of organic pollutants, such as phenolic compounds. Besides, the extent to which plants react to environmental pollution might depend on rhizosphere processes such as mycorrhizal symbiosis. In the present work, phenol tolerance of transgenic tobacco hairy roots (HR), namely TPX1, colonized with an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (AMF) was studied. However, the question is whether AMF symbiosis can moderate adverse effects of phenol to the plant tissues. Thus, the antioxidative response as well as parameters of oxidative damage, like malondialdehyde (MDA) content, were determined. Antioxidative enzymes such as peroxidase, superoxide dismutase, ascorbate peroxidase were higher in TPX1 HR colonized with AMF, compared to wild type HR colonized by AMF, in the presence of increasing concentrations of the pollutant. Besides, MDA levels remained unaltered in TPX1 HR associated with AMF treated with the xenobiotic. These results, suggested that this culture could tolerate phenol and moreover, it has an efficient protective mechanism against phenol-induced oxidative damage, which is of great importance in the selection of species with remediation capacities. Thus, transgenic HR colonized with AMF could be considered as an interesting model system to study different processes which play a key role in the phytoremediation of organic pollutants.

  • The thalloid liverwort Plagiochasma rupestre supports arbuscular mycorrhiza-like symbiosis in vitro
    Vanesa Analía Silvani, Carolina Paola Rothen, María Alejandra Rodríguez, Alicia Godeas, Sebastián Fracchia

    In the present study, we obtained in vitro dual cultures between the liverwort Plagiochasma rupestre and two arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi: Glomus intraradices and Glomus clarum. Four agarized culture media were tested for optimal growth of P. rupestre. Also, a description of the symbiotic association is provided. Plagiochasma rupestre gametophytes profusely grew axenically in MM with sucrose, and thalli were successfully subcultured under these growth conditions. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal hyphae colonized P. rupestre thalli through rhizoids or by forming appresoria in the ventral thallus cells. Arbuscules, mycelia and structures resembling intrathallic spores or vesicles were developed in the internal parenchymatic cells. The pattern of AM colonization in P. rupestre was very similar to the Paris-type. After 100 days of dual culture, the external mycelia of both AM fungal strains formed thousands of small viable spores, suggesting that P. rupestre in vitro culture could be a valuable tool for studying the biology of both symbiotic partners and conserving AM fungi in in vitro germplasm collections.