跨越海拔梯度的叶面黄酮类化合物:对紫外线反应的可塑性以及与花色素斑纹的联系

IF 4.5 2区 生物学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Matthew H. Koski , Elizabeth Leonard , Nishanth Tharayil
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引用次数: 0

摘要

类黄酮生物合成途径(FBP)产生的代谢物可缓解紫外线(UV)等因素造成的非生物压力。测试跨越生态梯度的种群之间组成型类黄酮的产生或类黄酮的可塑性是否存在差异,可以揭示地理模式是否与当地的适应性相一致。黄酮类化合物的非生物诱导可发生在叶片和花朵中,黄酮类化合物会影响传粉者感知的紫外线颜色模式。评估叶片类黄酮如何与花的颜色表型相关联,可以揭示多效性如何影响不同组织的生化表型。我们将来自高海拔和低海拔种群的阿根廷anserina(蔷薇科)植物暴露在低浓度和高浓度紫外线下,并使用超高效液相色谱耦合质谱法测量了叶片和花瓣黄酮类化合物的产量。我们将叶片黄酮类化合物的丰度与花瓣黄酮类化合物的丰度以及吸收紫外线的花瓣面积("紫外线靶心")的大小联系起来。我们发现,由于黄酮醇的上调,叶片总黄酮类化合物对紫外线的反应有所增加,但在高山种群中,只有一类黄酮类化合物(鱼黄素)表现出更强的可塑性。与低海拔种群相比,高山种群在暴露于较强紫外线时,槲皮素-山奈酚比率往往会增加,这是一种光保护和自由基清除作用的标志。在高海拔和低海拔种群中,叶片类黄酮与花朵紫外线靶心之间的关系有所不同。以前的研究表明,山奈酚苷类导致了高海拔地区紫外线靶心大小的变化,而跨越多个FBP分支的非山奈酚类则与低海拔地区的靶心大小有关。在这里,我们发现叶片山奈酚含量较少、花瓣山奈酚含量高于叶片的高山植物的花朵紫外线牛眼更大,这表明花朵紫外线模式可能是由组织间的生化权衡决定的。总之,通过详细的代谢物分类发现的类黄酮可塑性的细微海拔差异为局部适应提供了支持。此外,我们的研究还强调,叶片中黄酮类化合物的产生可能会影响基于黄酮类化合物的花表型的进化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Foliar flavonoids across an elevation gradient: Plasticity in response to UV, and links with floral pigmentation patterning
Metabolites produced in the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway (FBP) mitigate abiotic stress caused by factors such as ultraviolet (UV) light. Testing whether constitutive flavonoid production or flavonoid plasticity differ between populations spanning ecological gradients can reveal whether geographic patterns are consistent with local adaptation. Abiotic induction of flavonoids can occur in leaves as well as flowers where flavonoids influence UV color patterns perceived by pollinators. Assessing how foliar flavonoids are associated with floral color phenotypes can shed light on how pleiotropy affects biochemical phenotypes across tissues. We exposed Argentina anserina (Rosaceae) plants from alpine and lower elevation populations to low and high levels of UV and measured foliar and petal flavonoid production using UHPLC coupled mass spectrometry. We associated foliar flavonoid abundance with petal flavonoid abundance, and the size of the UV absorbing petal area (‘UV bullseye’). We found that total foliar flavonoids increased in response to UV due to flavonol upregulation, but only one class of flavonols, fisetin, exhibited stronger plasticity in alpine populations. Alpine populations tended to increase the quercetin-kaempferol ratio more than low elevation populations when exposed to higher UV, a signature of photoprotection and radical scavenging. Relationships between foliar flavonoids and the floral UV bullseye differed between alpine and low elevation populations. Previous work showed kaempferol glycosides contributed to variation in UV bullseye size at high elevation, while non-kaempferols spanning multiple FBP branches were associated with bullseye size at low elevation. Here, we found that alpine plants with less foliar kaempferol and greater kaempferol allocation to petals than leaves had larger floral UV-bullseyes, suggesting that floral UV patterning may be shaped by a biochemical tradeoff between tissues. Overall, nuanced elevational differences in flavonoid plasticity revealed by detailed metabolite classification provided support for local adaptation. Additionally, our study highlights that flavonoid production in leaves could influence the evolution of flavonoid-based floral phenotypes.
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来源期刊
Environmental and Experimental Botany
Environmental and Experimental Botany 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
342
审稿时长
26 days
期刊介绍: Environmental and Experimental Botany (EEB) publishes research papers on the physical, chemical, biological, molecular mechanisms and processes involved in the responses of plants to their environment. In addition to research papers, the journal includes review articles. Submission is in agreement with the Editors-in-Chief. The Journal also publishes special issues which are built by invited guest editors and are related to the main themes of EEB. The areas covered by the Journal include: (1) Responses of plants to heavy metals and pollutants (2) Plant/water interactions (salinity, drought, flooding) (3) Responses of plants to radiations ranging from UV-B to infrared (4) Plant/atmosphere relations (ozone, CO2 , temperature) (5) Global change impacts on plant ecophysiology (6) Biotic interactions involving environmental factors.
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