The involvement of the cytoskeleton in symbiotic interactions such
as arbuscular mycorrhizas has received little
attention. In this paper, we examine the organization of actin in tobacco
mycorrhizal roots and compare actin and
tubulin patterns within arbuscule-containing cells.
Our results show drastic reorganization of microfilaments and microtubules
upon fungal infection and how
those new cytoskeletal patterns relate to the host cytoplasm rearrangement
and the intracellular fungal structures.
Whereas in uninfected cells a network of cortical and perinuclear actin
filaments was observed, in infected cells
actin filaments closely follow the fungal branches and envelop the whole
arbuscule in a dense coating network.
Microtubules are less closely connected with the fungus surface. They run
across the whole arbuscule mass,
linking branches to each other and to the host cell cortex and nucleus.
These major differences between the two cytoskeletal components are
used to advance some suggestions
concerning their contribution to structural functions in the plant–fungus
interactions during the mycorrhizal
symbiosis.