Abstract
Herbivore-induced plant volatiles are often involved in direct and indirect plant defence against
herbivores. Linalool is a common floral scent and found to be released from leaves by many
plants after herbivore attack. In this study, a linalool/nerolidol synthase, FaNES1, was
overexpressed in the plastids of chrysanthemum plants (Chrysanthemum morifolium). The
volatiles of FaNES1 chrysanthemum leaves were strongly dominated by linalool, but they also
emitted small amount of the C11-homoterpene, (3E)-4,8-dimethyl-1,3,7-nonatriene, a derivative
of nerolidol. Four nonvolatile linalool glycosides in methanolic extracts were found to be
significantly increased in the leaves of FaNES1 plants compared to wild-type plants. They were
putatively identified by LC-MS-MS as two linalool–malonyl–hexoses, a linalool–pentose–hexose
and a glycoside of hydroxy–linalool. A leaf-disc dual-choice assay with western flower thrips
(WFT, Frankliniella occidentalis) showed, initially during the first 15 min of WFT release, that
FaNES1 plants were significantly preferred. This gradually reversed into significant preference for
the control, however, at 20–28 h after WFT release. The initial preference was shown to be
based on the linalool odour of FaNES1 plants by olfactory dual-choice assays using paper discs
emitting pure linalool at similar rates as leaf discs. The reversal of preference into deterrence
could be explained by the initial nonvolatile composition of the FaNES1 plants, as methanolic
extracts were less preferred by WFT. Considering the common occurrence of linalool and its
glycosides in plant tissues, it suggests that plants may balance attractive fragrance with ‘poor
taste’ using the same precursor compound.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 875-882 |
Journal | Plant Biotechnology Journal |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 7 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2013 |
Keywords
- induced plant volatiles
- terpenoid pathway
- mass-spectrometry
- herbivore enemies
- tomato fruits
- s-linalool
- host-plant
- emissions
- biosynthesis
- defense