4.7 Article

Comparative Metabolomics of Fruits and Leaves in a Hyperdiverse Lineage Suggests Fruits Are a Key Incubator of Phytochemical Diversification

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.693739

Keywords

chemical diversity; molecular networking; metabolomics; fruit; seed; leaf; Piper

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-1210884, DEB-1856776]
  2. Virginia Tech Department of Biological Sciences
  3. Fralin Life Science Institute
  4. Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station Hatch Program [VA-160085]
  5. Open Access Subvention Fund at Virginia Tech
  6. Open Access Funding Initiative at Utah State University

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The study found that fruits have higher chemical diversity compared to leaves, with fruits containing more unique compounds and having a higher total estimated chemical richness. Different plant organs, plant species, and the interaction between the two significantly influenced secondary metabolite composition. Variance in chemical composition across samples was higher for fruits than leaves.
Interactions between plants and leaf herbivores have long been implicated as the major driver of plant secondary metabolite diversity. However, other plant-animal interactions, such as those between fruits and frugivores, may also be involved in phytochemical diversification. Using 12 species of Piper, we conducted untargeted metabolomics and molecular networking with extracts of fruits and leaves. We evaluated organ-specific secondary metabolite composition and compared multiple dimensions of phytochemical diversity across organs, including richness, structural complexity, and variability across samples at multiple scales within and across species. Plant organ identity, species identity, and the interaction between the two all significantly influenced secondary metabolite composition. Leaves and fruit shared a majority of compounds, but fruits contained more unique compounds and had higher total estimated chemical richness. While the relative levels of chemical richness and structural complexity across organs varied substantially across species, fruit diversity exceeded leaf diversity in more species than the reverse. Furthermore, the variance in chemical composition across samples was higher for fruits than leaves. By documenting a broad pattern of high phytochemical diversity in fruits relative to leaves, this study lays groundwork for incorporating fruit into a comprehensive and integrative understanding of the ecological and evolutionary factors shaping secondary metabolite composition at the whole-plant level.

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