A strain of non-pathogenic Fusarium oxysporum Schlecht.
emend. Snyd. & Hans. has been selected for its capacity
to reduce the incidence of Fusarium wilt of tomato. Among the
possible
modes of action of this strain, competition
with the pathogen for the colonization of the root surface and tissues
has
been proposed. In order to study the
pattern of root colonization, young Lycopersicon esculentum
Miller (tomato) plants grown in a nutrient solution
were inoculated by a suspension of F. oxysporum microconidia and
processed at time-intervals for microscopic
observations. The fungal strain was transformed with the Gus reporter gene
to
facilitate the observations. Within
24 h of inoculation the root surface was colonized by a dense network of
hyphae, with the exception of the apex,
which was colonized only after 48 h. A few hyphae were observed penetrating
into
the epidermis, leading to the
internal colonization of the root cortex. This colonization was always
discontinuous, since defence reactions of the
plant limited the extension of the fungus. The barrier formed by thickenings
and
coilings of the cell walls and
hypertrophied cells was most frequently observed in the external cortex
and,
sometimes, deeper in the internal
cortex, close to the vessels which were never colonized. Typical defence
reactions such as wall appositions,
intercellular plugging and intracellular osmiophilic deposits, were frequently
observed. This is the first report,
based on microscopic observations, of the capacity of a non-pathogenic
strain of F. oxysporum to colonize roots of tomato.