To analyse the effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM)
colonization on tomato gene expression, two-dimensional
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE) patterns of
crude extracts, soluble and membrane proteins of
tomato roots, either mycorrhizal and the AM fungus Glomus mosseae
(Nicol. & Gerd.) Gerd. & Trappe or non-mycorrhizal, have been compared.
In the three fractions analysed,
AM colonization induced up-regulation with
down-regulation of the synthesis of polypeptides already present
in tomato roots and induction of some new
polypeptides. Separation of root extracts into soluble and
membrane fractions allowed us to identify two soluble,
and five membrane-bound, newly induced polypeptides in AM roots.
Comparison of the protein patterns of AM
roots with those of the external mycelium of G. mosseae showed
that one of the newly induced polypeptides might
correspond to a fungal polypeptide. By using this experimental
approach, we have been able to detect 44
polypeptides that are differentially displayed in tomato roots
as a consequence of the establishment of the AM symbiosis.