Dynamics of arbuscule development and degeneration in onion, bean, and tomato with reference to vesicular–arbuscular mycorrhizae in grasses

Abstract
A quantitative light and electron microscopic study of developign and degenerating arbuscules of the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus fasciculatum in onion, bean, and tomato was carried out to estiamte three parameters durign the colonization cycle and to compare these parameters with those in maize, oats, and wheat. The parameters are (i) Vv(a.c) the fraction of the host cell volume (c) occupied by the arbuscule (a); (ii) Vv(cy,c) the fraction of the host cell volume occupied by host cytoplasm (cy); and (iii) Sv(p,c) the ratio of the surface area of the host protoplast (p) to the volume of the whole host cell. Uninfected cortical cells contained 3.4% cytoplasm in onion, 3.1% in bean, and 3.5% in tomato. In cells with mature arbuscules, cytoplasm increased to 9.9% in onion, 14.2% in bean, and 13.6% in tomato. Cells with mature arbuscules contained 11.4% fungus in onion, 20.3% in bean, and 20.5% in tomato. The initial Sv(p,c) in onion was 0.10 .mu.m2/.mu.m3 and in bean and tomato 0.11 .mu.m2/mm3. This increased to 0.37 .mu.m2/.mu.m3 in onion, 0.82 .mu.m2/.mu.m3 bean, and 0.54 .mu.m2/.mu.m3 in tomato by the time arbuscules were mature. Development of the arbuscule was estiamted to take 2.5 days and occupied 33% of the total cycle time. The variation seen across host species can be used as an indicator of fungal and (or) host control for each parameter. Arbuscular parameters of onion were compared with those obtained by other authors.

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