Under defined laboratory conditions it was shown that two glucosinolate-containing plant species, Tropaeolum
majus and Carica papaya, were colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, whereas it was not possible to
detect AM fungal structures in other glucosinolate-containing plants (including several Brassicaceae).
Benzylglucosinolate was present in all of the T. majus cultivars and in C. papaya it was the major glucosinolate.
2-Phenylethylglucosinolate was found in most of the non-host plants tested. Its absence in the AM host plants
indicates a possible role for the isothiocyanate produced from its myrosinase-catalysed hydrolysis as a general AM
inhibitory factor in non-host plants. The results suggest that some of the indole glucosinolates might also be
involved in preventing AM formation in some of the species. In all plants tested, both AM hosts and non-hosts,
the glucosinolate pattern was altered after inoculation with one of three different AM fungi (Glomus mosseae,
Glomus intraradices and Gigaspora rosea), indicating signals between AM fungi and plants even before root
colonization. The glucosinolate induction was not specifically dependent on the AM fungus. A time-course study
in T. majus showed that glucosinolate induction was present during all stages of mycorrhizal colonization.