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Dive into the research topics where Radka Sudová is active.

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Featured researches published by Radka Sudová.


Plant and Soil | 2013

Arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis alleviates drought stress imposed on Knautia arvensis plants in serpentine soil

Pavla Doubková; Eva Vlasáková; Radka Sudová

Background and AimsPlants growing on serpentine bedrock have to cope with the unique soil chemistry and often also low water-holding capacity. As plant-soil interactions are substantially modified by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis, we hypothesise that drought tolerance of serpentine plants is enhanced by AM fungi (AMF).MethodsWe conducted a pot experiment combining four levels of drought stress and three AMF inoculation treatments, using serpentine Knautia arvensis (Dipsacaceae) plants as a model.ResultsAMF inoculation improved plant growth and increased phosphorus uptake. The diminishing water supply caused a gradual decrease in plant growth, accompanied by increasing concentrations of drought stress markers (proline, abscisic acid) in root tissues. Mycorrhizal growth dependence and phosphorus uptake benefit increased with drought intensity, and the alleviating effect of AMF on plant drought stress was also indicated by lower proline accumulation.ConclusionsWe documented the role of AM symbiosis in plant drought tolerance under serpentine conditions. However, the potential of AMF to alleviate drought stress was limited beyond a certain threshold, as indicated by a steep decline in mycorrhizal growth dependence and phosphorus uptake benefit and a concomitant rise in proline concentrations in the roots of mycorrhizal plants at the highest drought intensity.


Environmental Pollution | 2010

Potential and drawbacks of EDDS-enhanced phytoextraction of copper from contaminated soils.

Michael Komárek; Aleš Vaněk; Libor Mrnka; Radka Sudová; Jiřina Száková; Václav Tejnecký; Vladislav Chrastný

Incubation and pot experiments using poplar (Populus nigra L. cv. Wolterson) were performed in order to evaluate the questionable efficiency of EDDS-enhanced phytoextraction of Cu from contaminated soils. Despite the promising conditions of the experiment (low contamination of soils with a single metal with a high affinity for EDDS, metal tolerant poplar species capable of producing high biomass yields, root colonization by mycorrhizal fungi), the phytoextraction efficiency was not sufficient. The EDDS concentrations used in this study (3 and 6 mmol kg(-1)) enhanced the mobility (up to a 100-fold increase) and plant uptake of Cu (up to a 65-fold increase). However, despite EDDS degradation and the competition of Fe and Al for the chelant, Cu leaching cannot be omitted during the process. Due to the low efficiency, further research should be focused on other environment-friendly methods of soil remediation.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2012

Surprising spectra of root‐associated fungi in submerged aquatic plants

Petr Kohout; Zuzana Sýkorová; Martina Čtvrtlíková; Jana Rydlová; Jan Suda; Martin Vohník; Radka Sudová

Similarly to plants from terrestrial ecosystems, aquatic species harbour wide spectra of root-associated fungi (RAF). However, comparably less is known about fungal diversity in submerged roots. We assessed the incidence and diversity of RAF in submerged aquatic plants using microscopy, culture-dependent and culture-independent techniques. We studied RAF of five submerged isoetid species collected in four oligotrophic freshwater lakes in Norway. Levels of dark septate endophytes (DSE) colonization differed among the lakes and were positively related to the organic matter content and negatively related to pH. In total, we identified 41 fungal OTUs using culture-dependent and culture-independent techniques, belonging to Mucoromycotina, Chytridiomycota, Glomeromycota, Ascomycota as well as Basidiomycota. Sequences corresponding to aquatic hyphomycetes (e.g. Nectria lugdunensis, Tetracladium furcatum and Varicosporium elodeae) were obtained. Eight arbuscular mycorrhizal taxa belonging to the orders Archaeosporales, Diversisporales and Glomerales were also detected. However, the vast majority of the fungal species detected (e.g. Ceratobasidium sp., Cryptosporiopsis rhizophila, Leptodontidium orchidicola, and Tuber sp.) have previously been known only from roots of terrestrial plants. The abundance and phylogenetic distribution of mycorrhizal as well as nonmycorrhizal fungi in the roots of submerged plants have reshaped our views on the fungal diversity in aquatic environment.


Plant and Soil | 2007

Differences in the effects of three arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal strains on P and Pb accumulation by maize plants

Radka Sudová; Miroslav Vosátka

The effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi on the accumulation and transport of lead was studied in a pot experiment on maize plants grown in anthropogenically-polluted substrate. The plants remained uninoculated or were inoculated with different Glomus intraradices isolates, either indigenous to the polluted substrate used or reference from non-polluted soil. A considerably lower tolerance to the conditions of polluted substrate was observed for the reference isolate that showed significantly lower frequency of root colonisation as well as arbuscule and vesicule abundance. Plants inoculated with the reference isolate also had significantly lower shoot P concentrations than plants inoculated with the isolate from polluted substrate. Nevertheless, inoculation with either indigenous or reference G. intraradices isolate resulted in higher shoot and root biomass and inoculated plants showed lower Pb concentrations in their shoots than uninoculated plants, regardless of differences in root colonisation. Root biomass of maize plants was divided according to AM-induced colouration into brightly yellow segments intensively colonised by AM fungus and non-colonised or only slightly colonised whitish ones. Intensively colonised segments of the isolate from polluted substrate contained significantly higher concentrations of phosphorus and lead than non-colonised ones, which suggest significant participation of fungal structures in element accumulation.


Bioresource Technology | 2008

Cultivation of high-biomass crops on coal mine spoil banks: can microbial inoculation compensate for high doses of organic matter?

Milan Gryndler; Radka Sudová; David Püschel; Jana Rydlová; Martina Janoušková; Miroslav Vosátka

Two greenhouse experiments were focused on the application of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) in planting of high-biomass crops on reclaimed spoil banks. In the first experiment, we tested the effects of different organic amendments on growth of alfalfa and on the introduced microorganisms. While growth of plants was supported in substrate with compost amendment, mycorrhizal colonization was suppressed. Lignocellulose papermill waste had no negative effects on AMF, but did not positively affect growth of plants. The mixture of these two amendments was found to be optimal in both respects, plant growth and mycorrhizal development. Decreasing doses of this mixture amendment were used in the second experiment, where the effects of microbial inoculation (assumed to compensate for reduced doses of organic matter) on growth of two high-biomass crops, hemp and reed canarygrass, were studied. Plant growth response to microbial inoculation was either positive or negative, depending on the dose of the applied amendment and plant species.


Annals of Botany | 2013

High ploidy diversity and distinct patterns of cytotype distribution in a widespread species of Oxalis in the Greater Cape Floristic Region

Jana Krejčíková; Radka Sudová; Magdalena Lučanová; Pavel M. Travnicek; Tomáš Urfus; Petr Vít; Hanna Weiss-Schneeweiss; Bożena Kolano; Kenneth C. Oberlander; L.L. Dreyer; Jan Suda

BACKGROUND AND AIMSnGenome duplication is widely acknowledged as a major force in the evolution of angiosperms, although the incidence of polyploidy in different floras may differ dramatically. The Greater Cape Floristic Region of southern Africa is one of the worlds biodiversity hotspots and is considered depauperate in polyploids. To test this assumption, ploidy variation was assessed in a widespread member of the largest geophytic genus in the Cape flora: Oxalis obtusa.nnnMETHODSnDNA flow cytometry complemented by confirmatory chromosome counts was used to determine ploidy levels in 355 populations of O. obtusa (1014 individuals) across its entire distribution range. Ecological differentiation among cytotypes was tested by comparing sets of vegetation and climatic variables extracted for each locality.nnnKEY RESULTSnThree majority (2x, 4x, 6x) and three minority (3x, 5x, 8x) cytotypes were detected in situ, in addition to a heptaploid individual originating from a botanical garden. While single-cytotype populations predominate, 12 mixed-ploidy populations were also found. The overall pattern of ploidy level distribution is quite complex, but some ecological segregation was observed. Hexaploids are the most common cytotype and prevail in the Fynbos biome. In contrast, tetraploids dominate in the Succulent Karoo biome. Precipitation parameters were identified as the most important climatic variables associated with cytotype distribution.nnnCONCLUSIONSnAlthough it would be premature to make generalizations regarding the role of genome duplication in the genesis of hyperdiversity of the Cape flora, the substantial and unexpected ploidy diversity in Oxalis obtusa is unparalleled in comparison with any other cytologically known native Cape plant species. The results suggest that ploidy variation in the Greater Cape Floristic Region may be much greater than currently assumed, which, given the documented role of polyploidy in speciation, has direct implications for radiation hypotheses in this biodiversity hotspot.


Plant and Soil | 2011

Arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis on serpentine soils: the effect of native fungal communities on different Knautia arvensis ecotypes

Pavla Doubková; Jan Suda; Radka Sudová

Serpentine soils represent a unique environment that imposes multiple stresses on vegetation (low Ca/Mg ratios, macronutrient deficiencies, elevated heavy metal concentrations and drought). Under these conditions, a substantial role of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis can be anticipated due to its importance for plant nutrition and stress alleviation. We tested whether serpentine and non-serpentine populations of Knautia arvensis (Dipsacaceae) differ in the benefits derived from native AM fungal communities. Four serpentine and four non-serpentine populations were characterised in terms of mycorrhizal colonisation and soil characteristics. The serpentine populations showed significantly lower mycorrhizal colonisation than their non-serpentine counterparts. The mycorrhizal colonisation positively correlated with soil pH, Ca and K concentrations and Ca/Mg ratio. Seedlings from each population were then grown for 3xa0months in their sterilised native substrates, either uninoculated or reinoculated with native AM fungi. Two serpentine and two non-serpentine populations responded positively to mycorrhizal inoculation, while no significant change in plant growth was observed in the remaining populations. Contrary to our hypothesis, serpentine populations of K. arvensis did not show higher mycorrhizal growth dependence than non-serpentine populations when grown in their native soils and inoculated with native AM fungi.


American Journal of Botany | 2010

Ploidy-specific interactions of three host plants with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi: Does genome copy number matter?

Radka Sudová; Jana Rydlová; Zuzana Münzbergová; Jan Suda

UNLABELLEDnnnnPREMISE OF THE STUDYnPolyploidy has been shown to affect different plant traits and modulate interactions between plants and other organisms, such as pollinators and herbivores. However, no information is available on whether it can also shape the functioning of mycorrhizal symbiosis. •nnnMETHODSnThe mycorrhizal growth response was assessed for three angiosperms with intraspecific ploidy variation. Different cytotypes of Aster amellus, Campanula gentilis, and Pimpinella saxifraga were either left uninoculated or were inoculated with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi in a pot experiment. After 3 mo of cultivation in a greenhouse, plant growth, phosphorus concentration in the shoot biomass, and development of the AM symbiosis were evaluated. •nnnKEY RESULTSnNo significant ploidy-specific differences in AM development were recorded. The inoculation led to consistently greater phosphorus uptake; however, the effect on plant growth differed considerably among plant species, populations, ploidy levels, and AM species. A salient ploidy-specific response was observed in A. amellus. Whereas diploid plants benefited from AM inoculation, the hexaploids consistently showed negative or no-growth responses (depending on the AM species). In contrast to A. amellus, no interactions between inoculation and ploidy were observed in C. gentilis and P. saxifraga. •nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe first evidence is provided of a ploidy-specific response of a mycotrophic plant to AM fungi. Our results demonstrate the complexity of interaction between plants and associated AM fungi, with the ploidy level of the host plant being one component that may modulate the functioning of the symbiosis.


Mycological Progress | 2015

Rhizoglomus melanum, a new arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal species associated with submerged plants in freshwater lake Avsjøen in Norway

Radka Sudová; Zuzana Sýkorová; Jana Rydlová; Martina Čtvrtlíková; Fritz Oehl

A new species of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi (Glomeromycota) was isolated from the rhizosphere of isoetid vegetation, namely of Littorella uniflora and Isoëtes lacustris, in the freshwater lake Avsjøen (Central Norway), and propagated on bait cultures on Zea mays and L. uniflora, respectively. The fungus is distinguished by chestnut brown to dark brown, triple-layered spores, (137–)165–226(−285) μm in diameter, and 1–2 concolorous subtending hyphae that regularly form multiple septae within 100–600xa0μm from the spore base, each approximately 10–25xa0μm apart, while the pore directly at the spore base is open. It can easily be differentiated from all other species in the Glomeraceae by the combination of spore size, spore color, and the characteristics of the subtending hyphae. Phylogenetic analyses of the partial SSU, ITS, and partial LSU nrDNA sequences placed the fungus in the genus Rhizoglomus, well separated from all other species in the genus. The fungus described here as Rhizoglomus melanum was hitherto only found in lake sediments which might suggest its specificity for aquatic environment. It is the first new AM fungus ever, isolated and propagated from submerged, aquatic vegetation.


Plant and Soil | 2008

Effects of inoculation with native arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on clonal growth of Potentilla reptans and Fragaria moschata (Rosaceae)

Radka Sudová; Miroslav Vosátka

Many clonal plants live in symbiosis with ubiquitous arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, however, little is known about their interaction with respect to clonal reproduction and resource acquisition. The effects of arbuscular mycorrhiza on the growth and intraclonal integration between ramets of two stoloniferous species were studied experimentally in a nutritionally homogenous soil environment. Two species coexisting at the same field site, Potentilla reptans and Fragaria moschata, were selected as model plants for the study. Pairs of their ramets were grown in neighbouring pots with each ramet rooted separately. Four inoculation treatments were established: (1) both mother and daughter ramets remained non-inoculated, (2) both ramets were inoculated with a mixture of three native AM fungi from the site of plant origin, (3) only mother or (4) daughter ramet was inoculated. The stolons connecting the ramets were either left intact or were disrupted. Despite the consistent increase in phosphorus concentrations in inoculated plants, a negative growth response of both plant species to inoculation with AM fungi was observed and inoculated ramets produced fewer stolons and fewer offspring ramets and had lower total shoot dry weights as compared to non-inoculated ones. A difference in the extent of the negative mycorrhizal growth response was recorded between mother and daughter ramets of P. reptans, with daughter ramets being more susceptible. Due to AM effect on ramet performance, and thereby on the source-sink relationship, inoculation also significantly influenced biomass allocation within clonal fragments. Physiological integration between mother and daughter ramets was observed when their root systems were heterogeneous in terms of AM colonization. These results hence indicate the potential of mycorrhizal fungi to impact clonal growth traits of stoloniferous plant species, with possible consequences for their population dynamics.

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Dive into the Radka Sudová's collaboration.

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Jana Rydlová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jan Suda

Charles University in Prague

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Miroslav Vosátka

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Pavla Doubková

Charles University in Prague

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Martina Čtvrtlíková

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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David Püschel

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jana Krejčíková

Charles University in Prague

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Martin Vohník

Charles University in Prague

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Milan Gryndler

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Petr Kohout

Charles University in Prague

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