Hare, J. Daniel. 2007. VARIATION
IN HERBIVORE AND METHYL JASMONATE-INDUCED VOLATILES AMONG GENETIC LINES OF Datura wrightii.
Journal of Chemical Ecology 33: 2028-2043.
Abstract--. Many
plant species produce volatile organic compounds after being damaged by
herbivores. The production of volatiles also
may be induced by exposing plants to the plant hormone, jasmonic acid, or its
volatile ester, methyl jasmonate. This
study addresses the induction of the production volatile organic compounds
among genetic lines of Datura wrightii. Within populations, some plants produce
glandular trichomes while others produce nonglandular trichomes, and trichome
phenotype is controlled by a single dominant gene. Glandular trichomes confer resistance to some
herbivorous insects, but they also inhibit many natural enemies of those
herbivores. Because of the potential
benefit of natural enemies using volatile cues to find individuals of the
non-glandular phenotype, it is reasonable to ask if plants of D. wrightii that differ in trichome
morphology might produce different blends of volatile compounds. Volatile
compounds were collected from eight genetic lines of plants that had been
backcrossed for three generations.
Volatiles were collected from pairs of sibling plants before and after
insect damage or treatment with methyl jasmonate. Within each pair, one sib
expressed glandular trichomes and the other expressed nonglandular
trichomes. Overall, plants produced an
array of at least 17 compounds, most of which were sesquiterpenes. Total production of volatiles increased from
3.9 – 16.2-fold among genetic lines after insect damage and from 3.6 – 32-fold
in plants treated with methyl jasmonate.
The most abundant compound was (E)-β-caryophyllene. This single compound comprised from 17 – 59%
of the volatiles from insect-damaged plants and from 24 – 88% of the volatiles
from plants treated with methyl jasmonate, depending upon genetic line. The production of (E)-β-caryophyllene by the original male parents of the eight
genetic lines was significantly related to the mean production of their
third-generation backcross progeny indicating that the variation in the
production of (E)-β-caryophyllene
was inherited. Blends did not differ
qualitatively or quantitatively between sibs expressing glandular or
nonglandular trichomes.