Cultivar-Specific Defense Responses in Wild and Cultivated Squash Induced by Belowground and Aboveground Herbivory.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-24 DOI:10.1007/s10886-024-01523-9
Wenfeng Ye, Leandro Di Caprio, Pamela Bruno, Charlyne Jaccard, Carlos Bustos-Segura, Carla C M Arce, Betty Benrey
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Abstract

Plant domestication often alters plant traits, including chemical and physical defenses against herbivores. In squash, domestication leads to reduced levels of cucurbitacins and leaf trichomes, influencing interactions with insects. However, the impact of domestication on inducible defenses in squash remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated the chemical and physical defensive traits of wild and domesticated squash (Cucurbita argyrosperma), and compared their responses to belowground and aboveground infestation by the root-feeding larvae and the leaf-chewing adults of the banded cucumber beetle Diabrotica balteata (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). Wild populations contained cucurbitacins in roots and cotyledons but not in leaves, whereas domesticated varieties lacked cucurbitacins in all tissues. Belowground infestation by D. balteata larvae did not increase cucurbitacin levels in the roots but triggered the expression of cucurbitacin biosynthetic genes, irrespective of domestication status, although the response varied among different varieties. Conversely, whereas wild squash had more leaf trichomes than domesticated varieties, the induction of leaf trichomes in response to herbivory was greater in domesticated plants. Leaf herbivory varied among varieties but there was a trend of higher leaf damage on wild squash than domesticated varieties. Overall, squash plants responded to both belowground and aboveground herbivory by activating chemical defense-associated gene expression in roots and upregulating their physical defense in leaves, respectively. While domestication suppressed both chemical and physical defenses, our findings suggest that it may enhance inducible defense mechanisms by increasing trichome induction in response to herbivory.

Abstract Image

地下和地上食草动物对野生和栽培南瓜的特异性防御反应
植物驯化通常会改变植物的性状,包括抵御食草动物的化学和物理防御能力。在南瓜中,驯化导致葫芦素和叶片毛状体水平降低,影响了与昆虫的相互作用。然而,人们对驯化对南瓜诱导性防御的影响仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了野生和驯化南瓜(Cucurbita argyrosperma)的化学和物理防御特征,并比较了它们对带状黄瓜甲虫(鞘翅目:蝶形目)食根幼虫和啃叶成虫的地下和地上侵扰的反应。野生种群的根和子叶中含有葫芦素,但叶片中没有,而驯化品种的所有组织中都缺乏葫芦素。巴氏幼虫的地下侵袭不会增加根部的葫芦素含量,但会引发葫芦素生物合成基因的表达,与驯化状况无关,尽管不同品种的反应有所不同。相反,野生南瓜的叶片毛状体比驯化品种多,而驯化植物的叶片毛状体对草食性的诱导作用更大。不同品种的叶片食草量各不相同,但野生南瓜的叶片受损程度有高于驯化品种的趋势。总的来说,南瓜植物对地下和地上草食动物的反应分别是激活根部的化学防御相关基因表达和上调叶片的物理防御。虽然驯化抑制了化学和物理防御,但我们的研究结果表明,驯化可能会通过增加毛状体的诱导来增强可诱导的防御机制,以应对草食性侵袭。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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