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Front Plant Sci


Title:Changes in Tea Plant Secondary Metabolite Profiles as a Function of Leafhopper Density and Damage
Author(s):Scott ER; Li X; Wei JP; Kfoury N; Morimoto J; Guo MM; Agyei A; Robbat A; Ahmed S; Cash SB; Griffin TS; Stepp JR; Han WY; Orians CM;
Address:"Department of Biology, Tufts University, Medford, MA, United States. Tea Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou, China. Department of Chemistry, Tufts University, Medford, MA, United States. Food and Health Lab, Department of Health and Human Development, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, United States. Friedman School of Nutrition and Policy, Tufts University, Medford, MA, United States. Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainsville, FL, United States"
Journal Title:Front Plant Sci
Year:2020
Volume:20200529
Issue:
Page Number:636 -
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.00636
ISSN/ISBN:1664-462X (Print) 1664-462X (Electronic) 1664-462X (Linking)
Abstract:"Insect herbivores have dramatic effects on the chemical composition of plants. Many of these induced metabolites contribute to the quality (e.g., flavor, human health benefits) of specialty crops such as the tea plant (Camellia sinensis). Induced chemical changes are often studied by comparing plants damaged and undamaged by herbivores. However, when herbivory is quantitative, the relationship between herbivore pressure and induction can be linearly or non-linearly density dependent or density independent, and induction may only occur after some threshold of herbivory. The shape of this relationship can vary among metabolites within plants. The tea green leafhopper (Empoasca onukii) can be a widespread pest on tea, but some tea farmers take advantage of leafhopper-induced metabolites in order to produce high-quality 'bug-bitten' teas such as Eastern Beauty oolong. To understand the effects of increasing leafhopper density on tea metabolites important for quality, we conducted a manipulative experiment exposing tea plants to feeding by a range of E. onukii densities. After E. onukii feeding, we measured volatile and non-volatile metabolites, and quantified percent damaged leaf area from scanned leaf images. E. onukii density had a highly significant effect on volatile production, while the effect of leaf damage was only marginally significant. The volatiles most responsive to leafhopper density were mainly terpenes that increased in concentration monotonically with density, while the volatiles most responsive to leaf damage were primarily fatty acid derivatives and volatile phenylpropanoids/benzenoids. In contrast, damage (percent leaf area damaged), but not leafhopper density, significantly reduced total polyphenols, epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), and theobromine concentrations in a dose-dependent manner. The shape of induced responses varied among metabolites with some changing linearly with herbivore pressure and some responding only after a threshold in herbivore pressure with a threshold around 0.6 insects/leaf being common. This study illustrates the importance of measuring a diversity of metabolites over a range of herbivory to fully understand the effects of herbivores on induced metabolites. Our study also shows that any increases in leafhopper density associated with climate warming, could have dramatic effects on secondary metabolites and tea quality"
Keywords:Camellia sinensis Empoasca onukii catechins crop quality herbivory induced responses plant VOCs secondary metabolites;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEScott, Eric R Li, Xin Wei, Ji-Peng Kfoury, Nicole Morimoto, Joshua Guo, Ming-Ming Agyei, Amma Robbat, Albert Jr Ahmed, Selena Cash, Sean B Griffin, Timothy S Stepp, John R Han, Wen-Yan Orians, Colin M eng Switzerland 2020/06/18 Front Plant Sci. 2020 May 29; 11:636. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2020.00636. eCollection 2020"

 
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