Abstract

Despite active research, antiherbivore activity of specific plant phenolics remains largely unresolved. We constructed silver birch (Betula pendula) lines with modified phenolic metabolism to study the effects of foliar flavonoids and condensed tannins on consumption and growth of larvae of a generalist herbivore, the autumnal moth (Epirrita autumnata). We conducted a feeding experiment using birch lines in which expression of dihydroflavonol reductase (DFR), anthocyanidin synthase (ANS) or anthocyanidin reductase (ANR) had been decreased by RNA interference. Modification-specific effects on plant phenolics, nutrients and phenotype, and on larval consumption and growth were analyzed using uni- and multivariate methods. Inhibiting DFR expression increased the concentration of flavonoids at the expense of condensed tannins, and silencing DFR and ANR decreased leaf and plant size. E. autumnata larvae consumed on average 82% less of DFRi plants than of unmodified controls, suggesting that flavonoids or glandular trichomes deter larval feeding. However, larval growth efficiency was highest on low-tannin DFRi plants, indicating that condensed tannins (or their monomers) are physiologically more harmful than non-tannin flavonoids for E. autumnata larvae. Our results show that genetic manipulation of the flavonoid pathway in plants can effectively be used to produce altered phenolic profiles required for elucidating the roles of low-molecular weight phenolics and condensed tannins in plant–herbivore relationships, and suggest that phenolic secondary metabolites participate in regulation of plant growth.

Highlights

  • Performance of herbivores on plants is determined by a complex interplay of factors including plant chemical defenses, morphological traits and general nutritional quality (Abdala-Roberts et al 2016; Bedoya-Pérez et al 2014; Couture et al 2016;)

  • The changes occurring in DFRi plants decreased absolute and relative consumption and relative growth, but increased gross growth efficiency of E. autumnata larvae

  • RNA interference (RNAi) silencing of the three target genes produced chemical changes that comply with the predicted decreases in phenolics downstream of, and accumulation of compounds upstream of, each inhibited enzyme (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Performance of herbivores on plants is determined by a complex interplay of factors including plant chemical defenses, morphological traits and general nutritional quality

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