Quantification of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi by quantitative polymerase chain reaction
Description
Problem: Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) root colonization is traditionally measured by microscopy. Roots are first stained and then carefully mounted on a glass slide before examination on the microscope to identify and count fungal structures inside the roots. But microscopy is labor-intensive, and results depend on the observer.
Solution: Methods such as, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) can improve quantification and analysis of AMF. This practice abstract provides a short protocol describing qPCR as a method to quantify AMF in plant roots.
Benefits: The qPCR presents a reliable alternative method to quantify AMF root colonization that is less operator-dependent than traditional microscopy and offers scalability to high-throughput analyses. Advantages over microscopy are:
• Larger datasets can be analysed/quantified more thoroughly, in a faster amount of time
• qPCR provides more accurate and precise detection on amplified DNA sequences
• qPCR is highly specific and sensitive as opposed to visual observations made using microscopy
• why important for SolACE: to compare novel genotypes in their efficiency to form mycorrhizal symbiosis
Files
Symanczik, Bodenhausen-2022-PA-Quantification-AMF.pdf
Files
(293.8 kB)
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