Abstract

Erysimum cheiranthoides L (Brassicaceae; wormseed wallflower) accumulates not only glucosinolates, which are characteristic of the Brassicaceae, but also abundant and diverse cardenolides. These steroid toxins, primarily glycosylated forms of digitoxigenin, cannogenol, and strophanthidin, inhibit the function of essential Na+/K+-ATPases in animal cells. We screened a population of 659 ethylmethanesulfonate-mutagenized E. cheiranthoides plants to identify isolates with altered cardenolide profiles. One mutant line exhibited 66% lower cardenolide content, resulting from greatly decreased cannogenol and strophanthidin glycosides, partially compensated for by increases in digitoxigenin glycosides. This phenotype was likely caused by a single-locus recessive mutation, as evidenced by a wildtype phenotype of F1 plants from a backcross, a 3:1 wildtype:mutant segregation in the F2 generation, and genetic mapping of the altered cardenolide phenotype to one position in the genome. The mutation created a more even cardenolide distribution, decreased the average cardenolide polarity, but did not impact most glucosinolates. Growth of generalist herbivores from two feeding guilds, Myzus persicae Sulzer (Hemiptera: Aphididae; green peach aphid) and Trichoplusia ni Hübner (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae; cabbage looper), was decreased on the mutant line compared to wildtype. Both herbivores accumulated cardenolides in proportion to the plant content, with T. ni accumulating higher total concentrations than M. persicae. Helveticoside, a relatively abundant cardenolide in E. cheiranthoides, was not detected in M. persicae feeding on these plants. Our results support the hypothesis that increased digitoxigenin glycosides provide improved protection against M. persicae and T. ni, despite an overall decrease in cardenolide content of the mutant line.

Highlights

  • Plants produce a wide array of specialized metabolites as chemical defenses against insect herbivory

  • The molecular characterization of mutations and natural variation can facilitate research on the defensive functions of plant specialized metabolites, which are often produced as classes of compounds with similar chemical structures and target sites in insect herbivores

  • Until fairly recently, such experiments were only feasible with classes of defensive metabolites that are present in well-studied model systems, such as glucosinolates in A. thaliana, benzoxazinoids in Zea mays L (Poaceae), and glycoalkaloids in Solanum lycopersicum L (Solanaceae)

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Summary

Introduction

Plants produce a wide array of specialized metabolites as chemical defenses against insect herbivory. Some individual compounds can be broadly effective, greater chemical diversity has been shown to provide enhanced protection against a variety of herbivores. Compounds with similar structures and the same metabolic target site may act synergistically in defense against individual herbivore species. They have comparable photosensitizing functions, six fouranocoumarins from Pastinaca sativa L (Apiaceae) provided enhanced defense against Heliothis zea (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) relative to each compound individually (Berenbaum et al 1991). Growth of Trichoplusia ni Hübner (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae; cabbage looper), a generalist lepidopteran herbivore, was more strongly impacted by indole rather than aliphatic glucosinolates in A. thaliana mutant lines (Müller et al 2010). Performance of the cruciferfeeding specialist Pieris rapae L (Lepidoptera: Pieridae; white cabbage butterfly), which has a high level of glucosinolate tolerance due to chemical diversion of the breakdown products (Wittstock et al 2004), was not improved by the loss of either indole or aliphatic glucosinolates in A. thaliana (Müller et al 2010)

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