Abstract

Lupine (Lupinus spp.) is one of the crop plants from the Fabaceae family cultivated on a moderate scale in Europe, Australia and South America; however, its cultivation suffers from a severe fungal disease anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum lupini fungus. The search for resistant plant genotypes as well as methods of plant immunization against such infections is of importance. Plant interaction with pathogenic microorganisms results in complex regulation of many biochemical and physiological processes. Activation of expression of defence genes that leads to the induction of bioactive secondary metabolites biosynthesis is among them. The aim of the presented work was to investigate changes in the isoflavonoids quantities as the reaction of narrow leaf lupine (Lupinus angustifolius) plants growing in the field conditions to infection with the pathogenic fungus (C. lupini) or treatment with its phytotoxic metabolites followed after 48 h with infection with the fungus. The metabolic profiling after field experiments revealed variety-specific changes of these compounds. Elicitation of plants with fungal phytotoxin prior to infection resulted in higher levels of prenylated isoflavones, especially phytoalexins luteone and wighteone and their various glycoconjugates in comparison to those observed in plants infected only with the fungal spores. The metabolomic analyses were supported by the transcriptomic view of genes involved in isoflavonoids biosynthesis. Infection of Lupinus angustifolius by Colletotrichum lupini combined with former elicitation of plants results in accumulation of prenylated isoflavonoids and change in the isoflavone prenyltransferase gene expression pattern.

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