4.6 Article

Translocation of Loline Alkaloids in Epichloe-Infected Cereal and Pasture Grasses: What the Insects Tell Us

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof9010096

Keywords

phloem; xylem; rye; Elymus; ryegrass; tall fescue; meadow fescue; aphids; spittlebug; endophyte

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Aphids, which are major pests of cereal and pasture grasses worldwide, can be controlled by the loline alkaloids produced by Epichloe endophytes in certain grass species. However, these alkaloids do not affect aphids infesting Elymus species. The loline production in rye and meadow fescue is partitioned in the xylem, making it inaccessible to aphids.
Aphids are major pests of cereal and pasture grasses throughout the world, vectoring disease and reducing plant production. There are few control options other than insecticides. Epichloe endophytes that produce loline alkaloids in their hosts provide a possible mechanism of control, with both meadow fescue and tall fescue naturally infected with loline-producing endophytes showing a resistance to Rhopalosiphum padi. We screened Elymus spp. naturally infected with endophytes that produced loline alkaloids at concentrations known to affect aphids on fescue but found no effect on these insects infesting Elymus. A synthetic loline-producing endophyte association with rye also had no effect on the aphids. After hypothesizing that the lolines were being translocated in the xylem in Elymus and rye rather than the phloem, we tested the rye and meadow fescue infected with loline-producing endophytes against a xylem feeding spittlebug. The endophyte in rye inhibited the feeding of the insect and reduced its survival, whereas the endophyte-infected meadow fescue had no effect on the spittlebug but reduced the number of aphids. Lolines applied to the potting medium of endophyte-free and endophyte-infected rye, ryegrass, and tall fescue resulted in a decrease in the aphid populations on the endophyte-free pasture grasses relative to the untreated controls but had no effect on aphid numbers on the rye. We tentatively conclude that lolines, produced in both natural and synthetic association with Elymus and rye, are partitioned in the xylem rather than the phloem, where they are inaccessible to aphids.

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