Publications by authors named "Celine Bivort"

Vegetative compatibility and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) genotyping of in vitro multispores clonal lineages, issued from the same ancestor culture of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal strain MUCL 43194 and subcultured several generations in different locations, was assessed. Vegetative compatibility was studied by confronting the germ tubes of two spores from the same or different clonal lineages and stained with nitrotetrazolium blue-Trypan blue and diamidinophenylindole to detect hyphal fusions and nuclei, respectively. Further AFLP analysis of single spores was performed to assess the genetic profile and Dice similarity between clonal lineages.

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The development of the extraradical mycelium and auxiliary cells and spore production of Scutellospora reticulata in association with Ri T-DNA transformed carrot roots was followed under root-organ culture conditions. Extraradical mycelium development followed classical lag-exponential-plateau phases, with an additional late decline phase in number of auxiliary cells. Spore production started in parallel with a critical extraradical mycelium biomass produced, continued long after root growth ceased and during the late decline in auxiliary cells number.

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Radiocaesium enters the food chain when plants absorb it from soil, in a process that is strongly dependent on soil properties and plant and microbial species. Among the microbial species, arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are obligate symbionts that colonize the root cortex of many plants and develop an extraradical mycelial (ERM) network that ramifies in the soil. Despite the well-known involvement of this ERM network in mineral nutrition and uptake of some heavy metals, only limited data are available on its role in radiocaesium transport in plants.

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