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Symbiosis
Sym biosistogether life
Symbionts: organisms involved
Host: larger organism, if there is one
Mutualism: both symbionts benefit
Commensalism: one symbiont receives benefit while neither harming nor helping the other in any significant way
Parasitism: one symbiont, called a parasite, benefits at the expense of the other, usually a host
Anthropomorphism in biological definitions?
Neutral
Commensalism
Mutualism
InterspecificCompetition
Predation
Parasitism
Direct Effect on Species 1
Direct Effect on Species 2
Type of Interaction
0 0
0
Examples
Ants and plants (greehouse examples): mutualism with a large host
Epiphytic plants (many orchids): commensalism with a large host
Parasitism: Giardia, Plasmodium
Parasites need to be distinguished between cases where a pathogen may lead to death and where there may be a balance in the host-parasite relationship. For example, there can be genetic balances in virulence and resistance that operate at the populations level. Myxomatosis and rabbits
N2 + 8H+ + 8e- + 16 ATP = 2NH3 + H2 + 16ADP + 16 Pi
A point of special interest is that the nitrogenase enzyme complex is highly sensitive to oxygen
Mutualism: Nitrogen fixing bacteria and Plants
In biological nitrogen fixation two moles of ammonia are produced from one mole of nitrogen gas, using 16 moles of ATP and a supply of electrons and protons (hydrogen ions):
This reaction is performed exclusively by prokaryotes (the bacteria and related organisms), using an enzyme complex termed nitrogenase. This enzyme consists of two proteins - an iron protein and a molybdenum-iron protein.
The mutualism: plant gains nitrogen compounds, the bacterium gains carbohydrate and an environment with reduced oxygen
infectionthread
roothair
rootnodule
Soya bean Glycine maxand Rhizobium
Nodule formation 1
Roots emit chemical signals that attract Rhizobium bacteria. The bacteria emit signals that stimulate root hairs to elongate, and to form an infection thread by an invagination of the plasma membrane
Soya bean infection with Rhizobium
Nodule formation 2
The bacteria penetrate the root cortex within the infection thread. Plant cells start dividing and vesicles containing the bacteria, bacteriods, bud into the cells from the branching infection thread
Nodule formation 3
Growth continues in the affected regions of the cortex and pericycle and these fuse to form the nodule
Nodule formation 4
The nodule grows and vascular tissue connecting it to the plant’s xylem and phloem develops
TEM photomicrographs
http://www.sunderland.ac.uk/~es0man/tem2.htm
Small numbers of bacteria Large numbers of bacteria
7 days 12 days
Lens culinaris (lentil) root nodulation.
Leghaemoglobin
This shows as a pink colour when the active nitrogen-fixing nodules are cut open. Leghaemoglobin may regulate the supply of oxygen to the nodule tissues in the same way as haemoglobin regulates the supply of oxygen to mammalian tissues
Leghaemoglobin is found only in the nodules and is not produced by either the bacterium or the plant when grown alone.
Clover root nodules.
In symbiotic nitrogen-fixing organisms such as Rhizobium, root nodules can contain oxygen-scavenging molecules such as leghaemoglobin.,
G
Common beans, Phaseolus vulgaris, are poor fixers (< 50 lbs per acre) and fix less than their N needs. Maximum economic yield in New Mexico requires an additional 30-50 lbs of fertilizer N per acre. However, if beans are not nodulated, yields often remain low, regardless of the amount of nitrogen applied.
Some legumes, e.g., peanuts, cowpeas, soybeans, and faba beans are good nitrogen fixers, and will fix all of their N needs – up to 250 lbs of N per acre and are not usually fertilized.
There are many research programs attempting genetic improvement of nitrogen fixation, e.g., alfalfa. Genetic modification for tropical crops.
If large amounts of nitrogen are applied, the plant slows or shuts down the nitrogen fixation process.
Myco rrhizaeFungus Root
There are two major types:
ectotrophic mycorrhizae and
endotrophic mycorrhizae called vesicular-
arbuscular mycorrhizae because of the structures they produce inside
roots
Mycorrhizas are highly evolved, mutualistic associations between soil fungi and plant roots.
The host plant receives mineral nutrients while the fungus obtains photosynthetically derived carbon compounds.
Almost 80 percent of all terrestrial plants can form mycorrhizal associations.
Some fungi produce rhizomorphs containing specialised conducting hyphae, or sclerotia, which are resistant storage structures that survivein the soil
and then infect other plants.
Ectomycorrhizae
Fungal structures in soilAbsorptive hyphae
Mycellialstrand Scleridia
Mycorrhizalroot
Soil mycellium
Rhizomorphs
Mycorrhizal fungi produce a hyphal network in soils consisting of
individual strands of hyphae or relatively undifferentiated bundles of hyphae called mycelial strands.
Early stage of colonisation of pine short root by Pisolithus tinctorius. Hyphae (arrows) have contacted the root and are starting to proliferate on its surface near the apex (A).
SEM image showing the next stage of pine root colonisation by Pisolithus tinctorius. Mantle hyphae (arrows) have formed a dense covering on the root surface (arrows).
http://www.ffp.csiro.au/research/mycorrhiza/ecm.html
Example of ECM short roots (arrows) of birch (Betula
alleghaniensis), an angiosperm tree. The mycorrhizal
short roots are thicker than other laterals of the same
order due to the mycorrhizal infection.
Pinus radiata and Amanita muscaria ECM synthesised under sterile conditions. This association has highly branched short roots with many root tips (arrows).
Eucalyptus maculata and Astraeus pteridis association synthesised under sterile conditions with relatively unbranched ECM and attached mycelial strands (star).
Populus tremuloides ECM root cross section showing labyrinthine net hyphae (arrows) around elongated epidermal cells. This complex hyphal branching pattern is considered to increase the fungal surface area in contact with the root.
http://www.ffp.csiro.au/research/mycorrhiza/ecm.html
Hand section cleared and stained with Chlorazol black E and viewed with interference contrast microscopy
The network of hyphae in the soil is only connected to roots by the entry points that initiate mycorrhizal associations
Vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizae
(VAM)
Mycorrhizal root system washed carefully from coarse sand to reveal the intact network with external hyphae (arrow) with spores (S) produced by Glomus mosseae.http://www.ffp.csiro.au/research/mycorrhiza/ecm.html
Endotrophic
A colony of VAM refers to hyphal growth within a root resulting from the same external hyphae (1 or more connected entry points). These are also called infection units.
Epidermis
Hypodermis
CortexVesicle
Intracellularhyphae
AppressoriumAt entry point
Arbuscules
Intercellular hyphae in airchannel
The colony may produce arbuscules, exchange structures
Vesicles appear to be storage structures
Arbuscules (A) and convoluted hyphae (arrow) in the inner cortex of an Asarum canadense root. Arbuscules only form in the innermost cortex cell layer next to the endodermis in this species.
Vesicles (V) produced by a Glomus species in a leek root. This root also contains many intercellular hyphae. (Bar = 100 um)
http://www.ffp.csiro.au/research/mycorrhiza/ecm.html