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Volatile terpenes - mediators of plant-to-plant communication

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 108, Issue 3, Pages 617-631

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15453

Keywords

interaction; isoprene; monoterpenes; plant communication; sesquiterpenes; signaling; terpenes; VOCs; volatile organic compounds

Categories

Funding

  1. DFG [RO5311/4-1, SFB924]
  2. Chinese Scholarship Council
  3. Projekt DEAL

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Plants release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to interact with other organisms, with terpenes being the largest group of plant-released VOCs. These compounds not only protect plants from stresses but also convey environmental information. Different volatile terpenes can act as signaling cues between plants and trigger immune responses in receiver plants.
Plants interact with other organisms employing volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The largest group of plant-released VOCs are terpenes, comprised of isoprene, monoterpenes, and sesquiterpenes. Mono- and sesquiterpenes are well-known communication compounds in plant-insect interactions, whereas the smallest, most commonly emitted terpene, isoprene, is rather assigned a function in combating abiotic stresses. Recently, it has become evident that different volatile terpenes also act as plant-to-plant signaling cues. Upon being perceived, specific volatile terpenes can sensitize distinct signaling pathways in receiver plant cells, which in turn trigger plant innate immune responses. This vastly extends the range of action of volatile terpenes, which not only protect plants from various biotic and abiotic stresses, but also convey information about environmental constraints within and between plants. As a result, plant-insect and plant-pathogen interactions, which are believed to influence each other through phytohormone crosstalk, are likely equally sensitive to reciprocal regulation via volatile terpene cues. Here, we review the current knowledge of terpenes as volatile semiochemicals and discuss why and how volatile terpenes make good signaling cues. We discuss how volatile terpenes may be perceived by plants, what are possible downstream signaling events in receiver plants, and how responses to different terpene cues might interact to orchestrate the net plant response to multiple stresses. Finally, we discuss how the signal can be further transmitted to the community level leading to a mutually beneficial community-scale response or distinct signaling with near kin.

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