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Improved plant heat shock resistance is introduced differently by heat and insect infestation: the role of volatile emission traits

Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries ; Oecologia, 199(1), p.53-68, 2022Trabajos contenidos:
  • Liu, B
  • Kaurilind, E
  • Zhang, L
  • Okereke, C. N
  • Remmel, T
  • Niinemets, Ü
Tema(s): Recursos en línea: Resumen: Heat stress is one of the most important abiotic stresses confronted by plants under global climate change. Plant exposure to abiotic or biotic stress can improve its tolerance to subsequent severe episodes of the same or different stress (stress priming), but so far there is limited comparative information about how pre-exposures to different abiotic and biotic elicitors alter plant resistance to severe heat stress. We exposed the perennial herb Melilotus albus Medik., a species rich in secondary metabolites, to moderate heat stress (35 °C)and greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum West.)infestation to comparatively determine whether both pre-treatments could enhance plant tolerance to the subsequent heat shock (45 °C)stress. Plant physiological responses to stress were characterized by photosynthetic traits and volatile organic compound emissions through 72 h recovery. Heat shock treatment reduced net assimilation rate (A)and stomatal conductance in all plants, but heat-primed plants had significantly faster rates of recovery of A than other plants. By the end of the recovery period, A in none of the three heat shock-stressed groups recovered to the control level, but in whitefly-infested plants it reached the pre-heat shock level. In heat-primed plants, the heat shock treatment was associated with a fast rise of monoterpene emissions, and in whitefly-infested plants with benzenoid emissions and an increase in total phenolic content.
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Heat stress is one of the most important abiotic stresses confronted by plants under global climate change. Plant exposure to abiotic or biotic stress can improve its tolerance to subsequent severe episodes of the same or different stress (stress priming), but so far there is limited comparative information about how pre-exposures to different abiotic and biotic elicitors alter plant resistance to severe heat stress. We exposed the perennial herb Melilotus albus Medik., a species rich in secondary metabolites, to moderate heat stress (35 °C)and greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum West.)infestation to comparatively determine whether both pre-treatments could enhance plant tolerance to the subsequent heat shock (45 °C)stress. Plant physiological responses to stress were characterized by photosynthetic traits and volatile organic compound emissions through 72 h recovery. Heat shock treatment reduced net assimilation rate (A)and stomatal conductance in all plants, but heat-primed plants had significantly faster rates of recovery of A than other plants. By the end of the recovery period, A in none of the three heat shock-stressed groups recovered to the control level, but in whitefly-infested plants it reached the pre-heat shock level. In heat-primed plants, the heat shock treatment was associated with a fast rise of monoterpene emissions, and in whitefly-infested plants with benzenoid emissions and an increase in total phenolic content.

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