Phosphorus (P) deficiency remains one of the most significant constraints on global crop productivity, largely due to its poor mobility and strong fixation in soil matrices (Shen et al. 2011). Plants have evolved two primary strategies to overcome this limitation. One is a self-reliant “do-it-yourself” approach, in which plants increase root length, branching, and root hair density to explore more soil volume. The other is forming symbiotic associations with AMF that extend the nutrient-foraging zone via external hyphae (“outsourcing”) (Bergmann et al. 2020). The deployment of these strategies is governed by genotype, environmental conditions, and the spatial distribution of phosphorus in the soil, which is often heterogeneous and stratified in agricultural systems (Wen et al. 2019). Extensive research across soybean, cotton, and especially sorghum has established that P-efficient genotypes typically exhibit shallower, highly branched root systems with enhanced root surface area, fine root length, and lateral root density, traits that improve phosphorus acquisition from the P-rich topsoil layer (Hufnagel et al. 2024; Chen et al. 2019). These insights fit within a broader body of work including the discovery of the phosphorus-starvation tolerance 1 (PSTOL1) gene in rice (Gamuyao et al. 2012), demonstrating that early root proliferation, shallow rooting, and specific root phenes confer strong advantages under phosphorus limitation. Such architectural and physiological traits are widely used to classify P-efficient versus P-inefficient genotypes and to guide breeding efforts for improved phosphorus-use efficiency across multiple crop species (Wang et al. 2010). However, it remains poorly understood whether AMF symbiosis benefits genotypes with contrasting root architectures to a similar extent, or whether P-inefficient genotypes rely more heavily on AMF to compensate for limited soil exploration capacity. Moreover, little is known about how AMF colonization may reshape the metabolic profiles associated with P acquisition strategies. To address this gap, the study by Gill et al. (2025) provides important new insights. By comparing two sorghum accessions with high root surface area and shallow root systems (P-efficient genotype) and two accessions with low root surface area and deep roots (P-inefficient genotype), the authors demonstrate that AMF symbiosis consistently enhances shoot P accumulation and biomass across genotypes, regardless of their inherent root traits. This finding challenges the conventional root-centric view of phosphorus efficiency and introduces a more integrative framework in which symbiosis can equalize functional outcomes across genetically diverse accessions. Their work suggests that AMF can reconfigure both the morphological and metabolic dimensions of nutrient foraging, thereby acting as a functional bridge between genotypes historically classified as P-efficient and P-inefficient. This commentary summarizes the key contributions of this study, highlights its implications for crop improvement and nutrient management, and identifies future research priorities and opportunities to translate mycorrhizal responsiveness into crop improvement programs. The authors investigated how AMF influence plant growth, root traits, and P acquisition in sorghum genotypes with contrasting root architectures. They compared two P-efficient genotypes, with two P-inefficient genotypes. Interestingly, regardless of inherent differences in root trait or P application type, AMF consistently improved shoot biomass and P content across all accessions, which is consistent with the general AMF benefit effects (Weber et al. 2025). For instance, under stratified P with AMF, shoot biomass increased by 83% compared to non-AMF controls, accompanied by higher CO₂ assimilation and stomatal conductance. These results demonstrate that AMF contribute to phosphorus acquisition across diverse root architectural types and reinforce the idea that AMF can function as a physiological ‘equalizer,’ elevating P uptake and photosynthetic performance across diverse sorghum accessions. Gill et al. (2025) demonstrated that the primary benefit of AMF symbiosis lies in enhanced P acquisition, accompanied by a striking shift in root strategy from self-reliant foraging to a collaborative “outsourcing” mode. Non-mycorrhizal plants invested heavily in fine, elongated lateral roots with high specific root length (SRL), reflecting a do-it-yourself strategy for phosphorus scavenging. In contrast, AMF-inoculated plants exhibited shorter, thicker roots with increased root tissue density, reflecting an “outsourcing” strategy where fungal hyphae supplement or replace fine root proliferation. This aligns with root economics space, which predicts that when a cooperative fungal partner provides nutrient foraging services, plants reduce investment in carbon-intensive fine root production (Bergmann et al. 2020). A significant increase in root biomass under AMF and stratified P conditions further supports this functional reallocation. To evaluate the functional consequences of symbiosis, Gill et al. (2025) quantified AMF colonization, hyphal proliferation, and phosphatase activity across sorghum accessions. AMF-inoculated roots exhibited approximately 80% colonization, with clear absence of colonization in non-inoculated controls. Regardless of genotype, all AMF-treated plants showed positive mycorrhizal growth and P response. Notably, P-inefficient accessions such as PI-561073 derived the greatest benefit under uniform P supply, aligning with higher mycorrhizal growth response and mycorrhizal phosphorus response values. Stratified P conditions induced the longest hyphae, suggesting deeper fungal foraging. Acid phosphatase activity was significantly upregulated in AMF-treated plants, reinforcing a biochemical outsourcing strategy in which fungal-induced enzyme production boosts P mobilization from organic pools. Together, these findings position AMF as a reliable agent for improving P acquisition efficiency through coordinated symbiotic and enzymatic mechanisms. The root metabolites profiling by Gill et al. (2025) revealed that AMF colonization induces distinct metabolic reprogramming in sorghum. Organic acids, including malic, citric, and shikimic acids, were significantly elevated in both roots and leaves of AMF-inoculated plants, particularly under stratified P supply. These metabolites are well-known to facilitate P solubilization in rhizospheres (Wei et al. 2010; Andrino et al. 2021). This metabolic adjustment suggests that AMF not only extend physical foraging capacity but also induce host biochemical pathways that facilitate P mobilization. Further amino acid profiling showed that non-mycorrhizal plants accumulated higher levels of asparagine, aspartic acid, and glutamine, which play key roles in nitrogen metabolism and serve as precursors for other metabolites, suggesting a compensatory response to the absence of AMF. In contrast, AMF-inoculated plants were enriched in alanine, glutamic acid, isoleucine, valine, and tyrosine, reflecting enhanced protein synthesis, energy metabolism, and signaling associated with symbiotic nutrient acquisition. AMF also influenced host sugar allocation. Primary energy sugars, including fructose, glucose, and ribose, were significantly higher in AMF-inoculated plants, whereas transport and structural sugars, such as sucrose and xylose, accumulated more in non-mycorrhizal plants. These differences indicate that AMF favor carbon allocation toward active metabolism, while non-mycorrhizal plants invest more in transport and storage carbohydrates. Together, these observations highlight a coordinated rearrangement of nitrogen and carbon allocation that supports mutualistic nutrient exchange. Through untargeted metabolomics, Gill et al. (2025) identified 2698 metabolic features, with 17.7% upregulated and 12.4% downregulated under AMF colonization. Lipid-like molecules and organic acid derivatives, compound classes associated with membrane remodeling and nutrient mobilization (Keymer et al. 2017), were prominently upregulated. Conversely, lignans and related phenolic compounds, often linked to structural defense, were downregulated. This shift indicates a strategic reallocation of metabolic resources away from lignification and toward compatibility with fungal partners, consistent with evolutionary models of mutualistic optimization. Additionally, Gill et al. (2025) also observed the distinct modulation of root flavonoid profiles by AMF inoculation. Flavonoids like luteolin, kaempferol, and naringenin were consistently enriched in AMF-treated roots, regardless of genotype or P treatment. In contrast, constitutive flavonoids such as daidzein and formononetin varied primarily with genotype. This study highlights the metabolic investment required to sustain fungal partners and supports the hypothesis that AMF drive a coordinated, multi-layered metabolic reprogramming that reinforces mutualistic efficiency. The study by Gill et al. (2025) showed that AMF enhance phosphorus acquisition across genotypes regardless of inherent root system suitability and function as a unifying strategy for enhancing P uptake. The demonstration that AMF consistently elevate biomass and P acquisition across sorghum accessions with contrasting root architectures reframes the long-held assumption that P-efficient root systems alone dictate nutrient-foraging success under low-P environments. Instead, the results show that AMF enable functionally convergent P-acquisition outcomes, even in accessions with inherently different root phenotypes. While the highlighted study compellingly demonstrates that AMF contribute to phosphorus acquisition across sorghum genotypes with contrasting root architectures, the mechanistic basis underlying the transition between autonomous and symbiotic phosphate uptake remains largely unresolved. An important open question is which plant- or fungus-derived signals govern the preferential engagement of the mycorrhizal pathway under phosphorus limitation. Elucidating the molecular and physiological cues that regulate this shift will be critical for translating mycorrhizal responsiveness into breeding strategies and nutrient-management frameworks for sustainable phosphorus use. However, critical knowledge gaps remain. The host genetic networks governing AMF responsiveness under heterogeneous phosphorus conditions are still poorly defined, and the extent to which symbiotic efficiency varies across broader sorghum germplasm is unclear. Furthermore, the relationship between AMF colonization and root trait changes remains correlative, leaving open the question of whether these traits are directly regulated by fungi or an adaptive response by the plant. Addressing these questions will be critical for translating mechanistic insights into breeding strategies. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) across diverse sorghum accessions offer a promising approach to identify genetic determinants of AMF-induced traits, including colonization efficiency, hyphal proliferation, and specialized metabolite production. Integrating GWAS with high-resolution phenotyping of root architecture will help dissect how host genes coordinate morphological and biochemical adjustments under AMF symbiosis. Such studies could reveal regulatory modules analogous to PSTOL1 in rice (Gamuyao et al. 2012) or other P-efficiency loci that enhance early root growth and may interact with symbiotic pathways. Notably, SRL emerged as a sensitive marker for the shift from “Do it yourself” to “Outsourcing” strategy. Deciphering the molecular drivers of SRL plasticity, potentially involving cell wall remodeling genes, auxin/cytokinin signaling, and cortex development pathways, may reveal how plants negotiate the balance between autonomous and symbiotic P foraging. Finally, future studies should validate these findings under field conditions, where multiple abiotic and biotic factors coexist. Testing AMF-mediated equalization of P uptake under drought, salinity, or variable soil microbiomes will be crucial to determine the robustness of these symbiotic outcomes in real-world agroecosystems. Such work will be critical for designing resilient, phosphorus-efficient crops that capitalize on symbiotic partnerships to reduce fertilizer dependence. Integrating mycorrhizal responsiveness with classical root-based P-efficiency traits offers a powerful breeding strategy for advancing low-input, climate-smart agriculture. The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Data sharing not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analyzed during the current study.
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