Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 6 de 6
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Org Biomol Chem ; 21(21): 4445-4454, 2023 05 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37190792

ABSTRACT

Glycosylation reactions mediated by UDP-glycosyltransferases (UGTs) are common post-modifications involved in plant secondary metabolism and significantly improve the solubility and bioactivity of aglycones. Penstemon barbatus is rich in phenylethanoid glycosides (PhGs), such as echinacoside and verbascoside. In this study, a promiscuous glycosyltransferase UGT84A95 was identified from P. barbatus. In vitro enzyme assays showed that UGT84A95 catalyzed the glucosylation of the phenol hydroxyl group of PhGs efficiently as well as other structurally diverse phenolic glycosides, including flavonoids, terpenoids, stilbene glycosides, coumarins, and simple polyphenols. By using UGT84A95, 12 glycosylated products were prepared and structurally identified by NMR spectroscopy, among which 7 are new compounds. These findings suggest that UGT84A95 could be a potential biocatalyst to synthesize multi-glycosylated glycosides.


Subject(s)
Biological Products , Penstemon , Penstemon/chemistry , Penstemon/metabolism , Glucosyltransferases/metabolism , Glycosides/metabolism , Glycosyltransferases/metabolism
2.
J Chem Ecol ; 43(6): 599-607, 2017 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28589423

ABSTRACT

Plants produce a variety of secondary metabolites that function as a defense against their natural enemies. Production of these secondary metabolites is genetically controlled, but is also phenotypically plastic and varies in response to both biotic and abiotic factors. Therefore, plant species may vary widely in their chemical defenses and such variation can be evident at temporal, spatial and tissue levels. Focusing on the chemical defenses of a native Colorado wildflower, Penstemon virgatus, we assessed the variation in iridoid glycoside (IG) content across two non-consecutive growing seasons, six natural populations and three tissue types: leaves, stems and flowers. Our results indicate that P. virgatus plants contain high concentrations of IGs (mean = 23.36% dry weight of leaves) and that IGs were differentially allocated among tissue types. Leaves contained the highest concentration of IGs, which varied quantitatively between sampling years, among plant populations, and plant parts. We also quantified leaf herbivore damage at all six populations but we found very little herbivore damage. Our study indicates that the IG concentrations of P. virgatus plants are both spatially and temporally variable. Furthermore, the high concentrations of secondary metabolites combined with the low levels of damage suggest that these plants are well defended against generalist herbivores.


Subject(s)
Herbivory , Iridoid Glycosides/chemistry , Iridoids/chemistry , Penstemon/chemistry , Penstemon/metabolism , Animals , Chromatography, Gas , Flowers/chemistry , Flowers/metabolism , Iridoid Glycosides/metabolism , Iridoids/metabolism , Plant Leaves/chemistry , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Stems/chemistry , Plant Stems/metabolism , Plantaginaceae/chemistry , Volatile Organic Compounds/chemistry
3.
Ann Bot ; 112(4): 661-9, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23385116

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The lack of studies assessing the simultaneous expression of tolerance and resistance traits during seedling development and overall seedling defences as compared with adult plants, in general, constitutes a significant research need that can greatly improve our understanding of overall investment in defences during plant ontogeny. METHODS: Using two seedling and two juvenile stages of the perennial herb Penstemon virgatus (Plantaginaceae) evaluations were made of (a) patterns of investment in constitutive chemical defences [i.e. iridoid glycosides (IGs)], and (b) simultaneous variation in the short-term ability of seedling and juvenile stages to induce resistance traits, measured as induced chemical defences, or tolerance traits, measured as compensatory re-growth following moderate levels of damage by a specialist insect herbivore. KEY RESULTS: Plants were highly defended during most of their transition from seedling to early juvenile stages, reaching a constant approx. 20 % dry weight total IGs. Furthermore, following 30 % above-ground tissue damage, seedlings and juvenile stages were equally able to induce resistance, by raising their IG concentration by approx. 8 %, whereas compensatory re-growth was only achieved at young juvenile but not seedling stages. CONCLUSIONS: Two major trends emerged from this study: (1) in contrast to expected and previously observed trends, in this perennial plant species, seedlings seem to be one of the most well-defended stages as compared with adult ones; (2) high levels of constitutive defences did not limit the ability of young developmental stages to induce resistance following damage, although this response may come with a cost (i.e. decreased compensation) in young seedling stages. Hence, as has been previously demonstrated in few other systems, these results points towards an indirect evidence for a trade-off between tolerance and resistance traits at some, but not all, developmental stages; making them often difficult to detect.


Subject(s)
Herbivory , Insecta/physiology , Penstemon/metabolism , Seedlings/metabolism , Animals , Biomass , Penstemon/growth & development , Seedlings/growth & development
4.
Plant Signal Behav ; 8(1): e22704, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23221753

ABSTRACT

Natural selection is thought to have shaped the evolution of floral scent; however, unlike other floral characters, we have a rudimentary knowledge of how phenotypic selection acts on scent. We found that floral scent was under stronger selection than corolla traits such as flower size and flower color in weakly scented Penstemon digitalis. Our results suggest that to understand evolution in floral phenotypes, including scent in floral selection, studies are crucial. For P. digitalis, linalool was the direct target of selection in the scent bouquet. Therefore, we determined the enantiomeric configuration of linalool because interacting insects may perceive the enantiomers differentially. We found that P. digitalis produces only (S)-(+)-linalool and, more interestingly, it is also taken up into the nectar. Because the nectar is scented and flavored with (S)-(+)-linalool, it may be an important cue for pollinators visiting P. digitalis flowers.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Flowers/metabolism , Monoterpenes/metabolism , Odorants , Penstemon/genetics , Pollination , Selection, Genetic , Acyclic Monoterpenes , Penstemon/metabolism , Phenotype , Plant Nectar/metabolism , Stereoisomerism , Volatile Organic Compounds/metabolism
5.
Oecologia ; 160(4): 675-85, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19377900

ABSTRACT

Resource supply and pollen delivery are often thought to equally limit seed production in animal-pollinated plants. At equilibrium, plants should show no response to experimental pollen supplementation because resources limit seed set above the current level of pollen attraction, while experimental reduction in pollen deposition below the equilibrium level would reduce seed set. The predicted equilibrium may be disrupted, however, if plants expend additional energy to replenish removed nectar. We investigated the combined effects of nectar removal and pollen delivery on female reproductive success of Penstemon roseus (Plantaginaceae), a hummingbird-pollinated plant that replenishes removed nectar. We first documented that the frequency of experimental nectar removal was correlated with total nectar secretion; and increased frequency of nectar removal resulted in increased female reproductive costs to the plant. Trade-offs between investing resources in nectar and investing resources in seeds were then investigated in two contrasting natural populations by removing nectar from flowers at increasing frequencies while simultaneously hand-pollinating flowers with increasing amounts of pollen. Seed set was lowest at low levels of pollen deposition, highest at medium-sized pollen loads, and intermediate when pollen loads were highest. At both sites, the frequency of nectar removal and pollen deposition had an interactive effect on seed production, in that intermediate levels of nectar removal result in the absolute highest seed set, but only at intermediate pollen loads. At high pollen loads, seed set was higher following little to no nectar removal, and at low pollen loads, all rates of nectar removal affected fecundity equally. Seed mass responded to nectar removal and pollination differently than did seed set. High levels of nectar removal and pollen delivery both lowered seed mass, with little interaction between main effects. Our findings are among the first to demonstrate that nectar replenishment costs and pollination intensity jointly affect seed production. This conflict between nectar replenishment costs and pollen-limiting factors results in trade-offs between pollinator attraction and seed provisioning. Thus, resource allocation towards nectar production should more often be considered in future studies of pollen limitation.


Subject(s)
Carbohydrate Metabolism , Models, Biological , Penstemon/growth & development , Pollination/physiology , Seeds/growth & development , Analysis of Variance , Mexico , Penstemon/metabolism
6.
Acta Pol Pharm ; 47(1-2): 67-70, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12959263

ABSTRACT

The contents of iridoid glycosides penstemide and serrulatoloside were determined with HPLC method in callus and cell cultures, plants regenerated with tissue culture method and in the intact plants of Penstemon serrulatus Menz.


Subject(s)
Penstemon/metabolism , Triterpenes/metabolism , Culture Techniques , Glycosides/chemistry , Iridoids/chemistry , Triterpenes/chemistry
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...