Title: | Volatile-Mediated Induced and Passively Acquired Resistance in Sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) |
Author(s): | Grof-Tisza P; Kruizenga N; Tervahauta AI; Blande JD; |
Address: | "Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland. p.groftisza@gmail.com. Institute of Biology, University of Neuchatel, Neuchatel, Switzerland. p.groftisza@gmail.com. HAS University of Applied Sciences, Onderwijsboulevard, Netherlands. Institute of Biology, University of Neuchatel, Neuchatel, Switzerland" |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10886-022-01378-y |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1573-1561 (Electronic) 0098-0331 (Print) 0098-0331 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Plants produce a diversity of secondary metabolites including volatile organic compounds. Some species show discrete variation in these volatile compounds such that individuals within a population can be grouped into distinct chemotypes. A few studies reported that volatile-mediated induced resistance is more effective between plants belonging to the same chemotype and that chemotypes are heritable. The authors concluded that the ability of plants to differentially respond to cues from related individuals that share the same chemotype is a form of kin recognition. These studies assumed plants were actively responding but did not test the mechanism of resistance. A similar result was possible through the passive adsorption and reemission of repellent or toxic VOCs by plants exposed to damage-induced plant volatiles (DIPVs). Here we conducted exposure experiments with five chemotypes of sagebrush in growth chambers; undamaged receiver plants were exposed to either filtered air or DIPVs from mechanically wounded branches. Receiver plants exposed to DIPVs experienced less herbivore damage, which was correlated with increased expression of genes involved in plant defense as well as increased emission of repellent VOCs. Plants belonging to two of the five chemotypes exhibited stronger resistance when exposed to DIPVs from plants of the same chemotypes compared to when DIPVs were from plants of a different chemotype. Moreover, some plants passively absorbed DIPVs and reemitted them, potentially conferring associational resistance. These findings support previous work demonstrating that sagebrush plants actively responded to alarm cues and that the strength of their response was dependent on the chemotypes of the plants involved. This study provides further support for kin recognition in plants but also identified volatile-mediated associational resistance as a passively acquired additional defense mechanism in sagebrush" |
Keywords: | Humans *Artemisia/physiology Herbivory/physiology *Volatile Organic Compounds/pharmacology/metabolism Plants/metabolism Associational resistance chemotype induced resistance kin selection volatile signaling; |
Notes: | "MedlineGrof-Tisza, Patrick Kruizenga, Natasja Tervahauta, Arja I Blande, James D eng 797898/HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions/ 309425/Academy of Finland/ 2022/08/20 J Chem Ecol. 2022 Oct; 48(9-10):730-745. doi: 10.1007/s10886-022-01378-y. Epub 2022 Aug 19" |