Recently photoassimilated carbon and fungus‐delivered nitrogen are spatially correlated in the ectomycorrhizal tissue of Fagus sylvatica

0301 basic medicine PARTNERS Nitrogen VACUOLE SYSTEM Plant Roots ectomycorrhiza reciprocal rewards ALLOCATION MYCORRHIZAL PATHWAY 03 medical and health sciences Mycorrhizae nitrogen (N) Fagus NanoSIMS ROOTS recent photosynthates 0303 health sciences carbon Research SYMBIOSIS resource exchange 106008 Botanik 15. Life on land TRANSPORT Carbon 106008 Botany GROWTH Fagus sylvatica (beech) TRAITS
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17591 Publication Date: 2021-07-01T20:55:59Z
ABSTRACT
Summary Ectomycorrhizal plants trade plant‐assimilated carbon for soil nutrients with their fungal partners. The underlying mechanisms, however, are not fully understood. Here we investigate the exchange of carbon for nitrogen in the ectomycorrhizal symbiosis of Fagus sylvatica across different spatial scales from the root system to the cellular level. We provided 15N‐labelled nitrogen to mycorrhizal hyphae associated with one half of the root system of young beech trees, while exposing plants to a 13CO2 atmosphere. We analysed the short‐term distribution of 13C and 15N in the root system with isotope‐ratio mass spectrometry, and at the cellular scale within a mycorrhizal root tip with nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS). At the root system scale, plants did not allocate more 13C to root parts that received more 15N. Nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry imaging, however, revealed a highly heterogenous, and spatially significantly correlated distribution of 13C and 15N at the cellular scale. Our results indicate that, on a coarse scale, plants do not allocate a larger proportion of photoassimilated C to root parts associated with N‐delivering ectomycorrhizal fungi. Within the ectomycorrhizal tissue, however, recently plant‐assimilated C and fungus‐delivered N were spatially strongly coupled. Here, NanoSIMS visualisation provides an initial insight into the regulation of ectomycorrhizal C and N exchange at the microscale.
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