4.6 Article

Ultraviolet radiation modulates both constitutive and inducible plant defenses against thrips but is dose and plant genotype dependent

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEST SCIENCE
Volume 94, Issue 1, Pages 69-81

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10340-019-01166-w

Keywords

Frankliniella occidentalis; Jasmonic acid; Light; Phenolics; Plant defenses; UV

Categories

Funding

  1. STW Perspective program 'Green Defense against Pests' (GAP) [13553]
  2. China Scholarship Council (CSC) of the Ministry of Education
  3. Rijk Zwaan
  4. Dummen Orange
  5. Deliflor
  6. Dekker Chrysanten
  7. Incotec

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Supplemental UV radiation can enhance chrysanthemum plant resistance to Western flower thrips, with shorter exposure times proving more effective while longer exposure times have the opposite effect. The induction of plant resistance to thrips by UV is genotype-dependent and can persist after treatment, but is not passed on to the next generation. UV exposure slightly affects leaf metabolome and enhances the induction of defense mechanisms against thrips in chrysanthemum plants.
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation has emerged as an environmental cue with potential uses to enhance plant protection against arthropod pests in agriculture. UV can augment constitutive and inducible plant defenses against herbivorous arthropods. Here we investigated whether application of supplemental UV to chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum x morifolium Ramat) cuttings during their rooting phase enhanced plant resistance to an important insect pest, Western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis). For this, we analyzed how several daily UV exposure times affected plant damage by thrips on three different chrysanthemum cultivars. The most effective UV dose and responsive cultivar were further used to determine the UV effects on host plant preference by thrips, leaf metabolome and the induction of jasmonic acid (JA)-associated defenses. Our results showed that while short UV daily exposure times increased chrysanthemum resistance to thrips, longer exposure times had the opposite effect. Furthermore, we showed that UV-mediated induction of chrysanthemum resistance to thrips was genotype dependent and can persist after the end of the of the UV treatment. Yet, this induction was not transferred to the next generation from mother plants to cuttings. Nontargeted metabolomic, enzymatic and hormone analyses further revealed that UV slightly affected the leaf metabolome of chrysanthemum plants, and it enhanced the induction of JA-associated signaling after thrips infestation. Taken together, our results suggest that supplemental UV might modulate both constitutive and inducible chrysanthemum defenses against thrips.

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