The effect of arbuscular mycorrhizas on fructan accumulation was studied in barley (Hordeum vulgare) infected
with Glomus mosseae. Treatments with and without fertilizer were included in order to distinguish between mere
fertilizer effects and the effects of the symbiosis, and plants were harvested at two different time points, 35 and
50 d after planting. Fructan was the major storage carboyhdrate in both leaves and roots. The amounts of fructan
were markedly altered in the mycorrhizal plants. In roots of non-fertilized mycorrhizal plants, fructan pools were
significantly greater than in the corresponding non-mycorrhizal plants. By contrast, fertilization caused a general
decrease in amounts of fructan in roots. The increase of fructan in mycorrhizal roots was correlated with a decrease
of invertase activity. In leaves, fructan pools decreased or remained unchanged upon mycorrhizal infection;
fertilization had a similar effect. However, when individual leaves of a plant were compared, intriguing effects of
the mycorrhizal symbiosis could be observed. Whereas in non-mycorrhizal plants, the youngest leaves had the
highest fructan contents and the oldest leaves the lowest (as previously reported), this gradient was markedly
altered in mycorrhizal plants, indicating systemic effects of mycorrhiza on assimilate partitioning in shoots.