4.7 Article

Decoupling of Plant Growth and Accumulation of Biologically Active Compounds in Leaves, Roots, and Root Exudates of Hypericum perforatum L. by the Combination of Jasmonate and Far-Red Lighting

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11091283

Keywords

Hypericum perforatum L.; jasmonate; far-red light; growth-defense dilemma; plant growth; secondary compounds; hypericin

Funding

  1. PILOT grant (NIBIO)
  2. FORNY2020 verification grant [296377]
  3. Eurasia program [CPEA-LT-2016/10092]

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The study investigated the effects of the plant hormone jasmonic acid and far-red light signaling on plant growth and secondary metabolite accumulation, revealing that they mainly act independently without observable interactions. The combined application of jasmonic acid and far-red light enhanced the accumulation of most secondary compounds without compromising plant growth.
The plant hormone jasmonic acid (JA) fine tunes the growth-defense dilemma by inhibiting plant growth and stimulating the accumulation of secondary compounds. We investigated the interactions between JA and phytochrome B signaling on growth and the accumulation of selected secondary metabolites in Hypericum perforatum L., a medically important plant, by spraying plants with methyl jasmonate (MeJA) and by adding far-red (FR) lighting. MeJA inhibited plant growth, decreased fructose concentration, and enhanced the accumulation of most secondary metabolites. FR enhanced plant growth and starch accumulation and did not decrease the accumulation of most secondary metabolites. MeJA and FR acted mostly independently with no observable interactions on plant growth or secondary metabolite levels. The accumulation of different compounds (e.g., hypericin, flavonols, flavan-3-ols, and phenolic acid) in shoots, roots, and root exudates showed different responses to the two treatments. These findings indicate that the relationship between growth and secondary compound accumulation is specific and depends on the classes of compounds and/or their organ location. The combined application of MeJA and FR enhanced the accumulation of most secondary compounds without compromising plant growth. Thus, the negative correlations between biomass and the content of secondary compounds predicted by the growth-defense dilemma were overcome.

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