Calf Onno W, Huber Heidrun, Peters Janny L, Weinhold Alexander, van Dam Nicole M
Molecular Interaction Ecology, Institute for Water and Wetland Research (IWWR), Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Experimental Plant Ecology, Institute for Water and Wetland Research (IWWR), Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Oecologia. 2018 Jun;187(2):495-506. doi: 10.1007/s00442-018-4064-z. Epub 2018 Jan 30.
In natural environments, plants have to deal with a wide range of different herbivores whose communities vary in time and space. It is believed that the chemical diversity within plant species has mainly arisen from selection pressures exerted by herbivores. So far, the effects of chemical diversity on plant resistance have mostly been assessed for arthropod herbivores. However, also gastropods, such as slugs, can cause extensive damage to plants. Here we investigate to what extent individual Solanum dulcamara plants differ in their resistance to slug herbivory and whether this variation can be explained by differences in secondary metabolites. We performed a series of preference assays using the grey field slug (Deroceras reticulatum) and S. dulcamara accessions from eight geographically distinct populations from the Netherlands. Significant and consistent variation in slug preference was found for individual accessions within and among populations. Metabolomic analyses showed that variation in steroidal glycoalkaloids (GAs) correlated with slug preference; accessions with high GA levels were consistently less damaged by slugs. One, strongly preferred, accession with particularly low GA levels contained high levels of structurally related steroidal compounds. These were conjugated with uronic acid instead of the glycoside moieties common for Solanum GAs. Our results illustrate how intraspecific variation in steroidal glycoside profiles affects resistance to slug feeding. This suggests that also slugs should be considered as important drivers in the co-evolution between plants and herbivores.
在自然环境中,植物必须应对种类繁多、群落随时间和空间变化的不同食草动物。人们认为,植物物种内部的化学多样性主要源于食草动物施加的选择压力。到目前为止,化学多样性对植物抗性的影响大多是针对节肢动物食草动物进行评估的。然而,腹足纲动物,如蛞蝓,也会对植物造成广泛损害。在这里,我们研究了单个欧白英植株对蛞蝓取食的抗性差异程度,以及这种差异是否可以用次生代谢物的差异来解释。我们使用灰地蛞蝓(Deroceras reticulatum)和来自荷兰八个地理上不同种群的欧白英种质进行了一系列偏好试验。在种群内部和种群之间的单个种质中发现了蛞蝓偏好的显著且一致的差异。代谢组学分析表明,甾体糖苷生物碱(GAs)的差异与蛞蝓偏好相关;GA水平高的种质受蛞蝓的损害一直较小。一种GA水平特别低但被强烈偏好的种质含有高水平的结构相关甾体化合物。这些化合物与糖醛酸结合,而不是茄属植物GAs常见的糖苷部分。我们的结果说明了甾体糖苷谱的种内差异如何影响对蛞蝓取食的抗性。这表明,蛞蝓也应被视为植物与食草动物共同进化的重要驱动因素。