Abstract

In the Brassicaceae glucosinolates influence feeding, reproduction and development of many insect herbivores. Glucosinolate production and effects on herbivore feeding have been extensively studied in the model species Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica crops, both of which constitutively produce leaf glucosinolates mostly derived from the amino acid methionine. Much less is known about the regulation or role in defense of glucosinolates derived from other aliphatic amino acids such as the branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) valine and isoleucine. We have identified a glucosinolate polymorphism in Boechera stricta controlling the allocation to BCAA- vs. methionine-derived glucosinolates in both leaves and seeds. Boechera stricta is a perennial species that grows in mostly undisturbed habitats of western North America. We have measured glucosinolate profiles and concentrations in 192 F2 lines that have previously been used for genetic map construction. We also performed herbivory assays on six F3 replicates per F2 line using the generalist lepidopteran Trichoplusia ni. Quantitative Trait Locus (QTL) analysis identified a single locus controlling both glucosinolate profile and levels of herbivory, the Branched Chain-Methionine Allocation or BCMA QTL. We have delimited this QTL to a small genomic region with a 1.0 LOD confidence interval just 1.9 cM wide, which in A. thaliana contains ∼100 genes. We also found that methionine-derived glucosinolates provided significantly greater defense than the BCAA-derived glucosinolates against feeding by this generalist insect herbivore. The future positional cloning of this locus will allow for testing various adaptive explanations.

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