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First published online August 19, 2009; 10.1104/pp.109.142661 Plant Physiology 151:925-935 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
The Role of Specific Tomato Volatiles in Tomato-Whitefly Interaction1,[W],[OA]Keygene, 6700 AE Wageningen, The Netherlands (P.M.B., P.J.D., J.G., M.T.J.B.); University of Amsterdam, Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, Department of Plant Physiology, 1098 XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands (P.M.B., K.A., M.A.H., R.C.S.); and University of Göttingen, Department of Forest Zoology and Forest Conservation, 37077 Goettingen, Germany (M.W., S.S.)
Bemisia tabaci (whitefly) infestations and the subsequent transfer of viruses are the cause of severe losses in crop production and horticultural practice. To improve biological control of B. tabaci, we investigated repellent properties of plant-produced semiochemicals. The mix of headspace volatiles, collected from naturally repellent wild tomato accessions, influenced B. tabaci initial choice behavior, indicating a role for plant semiochemicals in locating host plants. A collection of wild tomato accessions and introgression lines (Solanum pennellii LA716 x Solanum lycopersicum Moneyberg) were extensively screened for attractiveness to B. tabaci, and their headspace profiles were determined by means of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Correlation analysis revealed that several terpenoids were putatively involved in tomato-whitefly interactions. Several of these candidate compounds conferred repellence to otherwise attractive tomato plants when applied to the plant's branches on paper cards. The sesquiterpenes zingiberene and curcumene and the monoterpenes p-cymene, -terpinene, and -phellandrene had the strongest effects in free-choice bioassays. These terpenes also elicited a response of receptors on the insect's antennae as determined by electroantennography. Conversely, the monoterpene β-myrcene showed no activity in both assays. B. tabaci apparently uses, besides visual cues, specific plant volatile cues for the initial selection of a host. Altering whitefly choice behavior by manipulation of the terpenoid composition of the host headspace may therefore be feasible.
During the last decades, a worldwide spread of the pest insects Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) and greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum) has led to local devastation of vegetable and ornamental crops, resulting in large economic losses. The damage whiteflies cause by their feeding behavior, such as affected biochemistry and development (for review, see Inbar and Gerling, 2008
B. tabaci was originally restricted to subtropical regions and greenhouses. However, the new and extremely invasive B and Q biotypes have the ability to rapidly adapt to more temperate zones and new host species (Jones, 2003
During insect host selection, orientation, and landing, both visual and olfactory cues play a predominant role (Visser, 1988
Volatile organic compounds released by plants can act as semiochemicals. They play an important role in enabling insects to recognize host plants from a distance (Schütz et al., 1997 The aim of this study is to identify the role of plant volatiles in the B. tabaci-tomato host interaction and to identify the terpenes that cause repellence of a selection of wild tomato accessions. The potential of several terpenes as repellent olfactory cues in B. tabaci host-preference behavior has been assessed in behavioral studies and through electroantennography (EAG).
Characterization of B. tabaci Populations Morphologically indistinguishable B. tabaci populations are known to exhibit large variations in biological traits as well as a distinct genetic variation. B. tabaci populations were collected from crop production sites all over the world, and the amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) technique was used to investigate the extent and nature of intraspecific variability of the assorted B. tabaci populations.
Genetic diversity assessment of the various populations revealed three distinct clusters, which appear to be geographically correlated (Supplemental Fig. S1) and could be identified as biotype Q, biotype B, and an undetermined (U) biotype using biotype-specific PCR markers (Khasdan et al., 2005
The relative attraction of B. tabaci to the accessions of the tomato collection, containing 16 wild and five cultivated tomatoes, was determined in free-choice bioassays with B. tabaci. In these bioassays, the number of flies per plant was counted 10 min after release in the center of the arena. Examination of host-preference behavior of two selected biotype populations (B and Q) revealed no differential preference behavior of these whiteflies in free-choice bioassays with cultivated and wild tomato (Fig. 1A ; P > 0.5). Therefore, it was decided to use the Q biotype (Almería B) population in all further assays.
Prior to starting large-scale bioassays, it was established that B. tabaci preference behavior is indeed influenced by the volatiles in the headspace of the tomato plants. Preference assays were done with four different Solanum lycopersicum cultivars of the same age, height, shape, and color. Afterward, the experiment was repeated with the same plants now individually placed under a mesh cover (Supplemental Fig. S2) to conceal the shape and color of the plant so that whiteflies could make a choice based on the volatiles they detect. Even though fewer whiteflies were recaptured in the absence of visual cues, the relative distribution of whiteflies over tomatoes with different attraction did not change (P > 0.5) compared to that obtained with exposed plants (Fig. 1B). The presence of the Mi1.2 gene in two of the cultivated tomatoes (Motelle and Mogeor) had no influence on the choice of the whiteflies in our experimental setup. Sequential stepwise bioassays revealed a clear preference of the whiteflies for cultivated tomato plants over the wild tomato accessions. Solanum pennellii LA2560 and Solanum habrochaites PI127826 ranked as least preferred, whereas Solanum peruvianum LA1708 was only slightly less attractive than the cultivated tomato plants as indicated by the classification in seven preference groups (Table I). Next, we determined whether the collected headspace volatiles of the two least preferred tomatoes (S. pennellii LA2560 and S. habrochaites PI127826) could reduce the attractiveness of the cultivated tomato (S. lycopersicum Moneymaker). The headspace volatiles collected over 24 h were applied to a S. lycopersicum Moneymaker plant on 10 filter paper cards distributed over the entire plant (for concentrations, see Table I). Free-choice bioassays were performed with four plants, of which one received wild tomato volatiles. In this setup, the cultivated tomato with the headspace volatiles of LA2560 or PI127826 attracted up to 60% less whiteflies (Fig. 2, A and B , respectively). The carrier of the headspace volatiles, pentane-diethylether, alone did not affect the choice of B. tabaci (Fig. 2).
Determining Headspace Components as Cues for Repellence
In addition to bioassays, a headspace volatile fingerprint for each tomato plant of our collection was assembled using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses. In total, 51 major components were identified in the headspace of undamaged plants (Supplemental Table S1). These data, in combination with the preference behavior of the whiteflies, were subjected to multiple linear regression and multivariate ANOVA analyses, which resulted in the identification of five semiochemicals that could influence the choice of B. tabaci. An association with reduced preference by the wild tomato accessions was found for the sesquiterpenes zingiberene and curcumene, mostly present in S. habrochaites (formerly f. typicum) and three monoterpenes from S. pennellii: p-cymene,
Because S. pennellii accessions appeared to be unattractive to whiteflies, introgression lines of a S. pennellii LA716 x S. lycopersicum Moneyberg cross were subsequently screened in free-choice bioassays (Supplemental Fig. S3) with the aim to find additional candidate volatiles. None of the introgression lines ranked as repellent as the LA716 parent. Ten introgression lines with lowered attraction and one line with equal whitefly attraction compared to the Moneyberg parent were selected, and the headspace composition of these selected lines and the Moneyberg parent was determined. Seven monoterpenes were detected in the headspaces of the parents and the introgression lines (β-myrcene, 2-carene,
In addition, S. lycopersicum Moneymaker and three wild tomatoes (LA2560, PI127826, and GI1560) were analyzed for the production of green leaf volatiles (GLVs) by proton transfer reaction-mass spectrometry (Steeghs et al., 2006
To confirm the correlation between the seven candidate semiochemicals and B. tabaci behavior, host preference was assayed in bioassays with pure components. The selected pure volatile chemical(s) were administered on paper cards to Moneymaker plants (as described above). In the absence of added volatiles, the percentage of recaptured B. tabaci on each of the four tomato Moneymaker plants did not deviate significantly from the expected 25% (data not shown). However, when 10 µg p-cymene was spotted on a filter paper and added to one of the plants, this plant became significantly (P < 0.001; Table III)
less attractive to the whiteflies compared to the control plants. The percentage of whiteflies visiting the plant with p-cymene decreased with 44% on average, whereas the control plants harbored increased numbers of B. tabaci, as expected (Fig. 3A
).Addition of 10 µg β-myrcene on the other hand did not influence whitefly behavior (Fig. 3C). Application of 10 µg
EAG
To investigate the responsiveness of B. tabaci to the selected semiochemicals, EAG was employed on whitefly antennae by puffing a 10–3 dilution of pure compounds over an isolated antenna and recording its physiological response. B. tabaci antennae responded to all compounds tested with the exception of β-myrcene (Table III). Comparably high responses of antennae to 10–4 dilutions of
In this article, two functional metabolomic approaches led to the identification of several volatile mono- and sesquiterpenes from tomato that influence the whiteflies' choice for this host. The addition of some of these terpenes to the headspace of an otherwise attractive, cultivated tomato plant significantly reduced the number of whitefly visitations or, in other words, made the plant less preferred. Based on these observations, i.e. host selection based on odor cues instead of visual cues, together with a specific antennal response to certain terpenes, we propose a significant role for plants volatiles in the choice behavior of whiteflies.
The AFLP result presented in Supplemental Figure S1 confirms the previously reported genetic genetic variation between whitefly populations (Frohlich et al., 1999 Choice assays with tomato plants under a mesh cover indicated that whiteflies still make the same choice when only olfactory signals are offered (Fig. 1B). However, fewer whiteflies made a choice when the plants were covered, indicating that locating hosts effectively requires multimodal sensory signals, including visual cues.
From previous studies it was known that the wild tomatoes S. pennellii and S. habrochaites (former Lycopersicon hirsutum) are less preferred by B. tabaci than cultivated tomato varieties, which was attributed to the production of volatiles by their glandular trichomes (Simmons and Gurr, 2005
Our untargeted approach of correlating the headspace profiles of 21 different tomato lines with their relative attractiveness revealed only terpenes as putative semiochemicals in the tomato-whitefly interaction. Among these were zingiberene and curcumene (Table I), which are apparently not only toxic (Weston et al., 1989
Another important group of volatile components, the green leaf volatiles, were excluded from a role as semiochemicals in the initial whitefly-tomato interaction, as we could not detect these compounds unless tomatoes were mechanically damaged (data not shown). Terpenes are known to be constituents of essential plant oils with ecological roles in plant-insect relations, including a role as insect repellents (Bruce et al., 2005b
The olfactory receptor neurons in an insect's antennae will not only detect the ratio of compounds for recognition of a host (Webster et al., 2008
By correlation of headspace analyses and behavioral assays, two sesquiterpenes, zingiberene and curcumene, were identified as putatively involved in the whitefly-tomato interaction (Table I). This was corroborated in the reconstitution experiments (Fig. 3, G and H). In addition, EAG analyses confirmed both compounds to be recognized by whitefly antennae (Table III). Zingiberene readily transforms to curcumene in the presence of air (Chen and Ho, 1988
Of the monoterpenes associated with repellence in correlation analyses, p-cymene,
Apparently, B. tabaci antennae are able to identify specific terpenes in their host headspace to which they zoom in. Odor cues might indicate toxic or other life-threatening environments. Whiteflies were found to be able to select their host plant based not on host quality, but possibly associated to predator related cues (Nomikou et al., 2003
Tomato and Bemisia tabaci Material and Rearing Conditions Tomato (Solanum spp.) accessions spanning a variety of different types and cultivars were either provided by Dutch seed companies (via Keygene) or ordered via the C.M. Rick Tomato Genetics Resource Center (Davis, CA) and grown in a greenhouse compartment (22–25°C, 16/8 h photoperiod at 500 µE m–2 s–1). The collection consisted of five cultivated tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum; cv Moneymaker, cv Mogeor, cv Motelle, cv Monalbo, and cv Pitenza) and 16 wild tomatoes, among which were Solanum pennellii (accessions LA2560, LA716, and LA1340), Solanum habrochaites former f. typicum (accessions LA1777, LA1553, PI127826, and PI127827) and former f. glabratum (accessions PI126449, PI134417, PI134418, PI251304, IVT701631, LA407, GI1560, and LA1840), and Solanum peruvianum (accession LA1708). To measure B. tabaci response and measure headspace volatiles in the same genetic background, plants were propagated by cuttings. For a second approach, a S. pennellii LA716 x S. lycopersicum Moneyberg introgression population (Keygene) was screened for B. tabaci response. The introgression library (72 lines) was built from three backcrosses to the recurring parent and from here on, individual plants were selfed until homozygosity of the donor fragments was achieved. The headspace volatiles were determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses as described below for both parents as well as for a subset of 11 introgression lines. A population of B. tabaci used in the bioassays was collected at a production greenhouse in Santa María del Águila (Almería province, Spain) in October, 2005. The population was reared in a climatized chamber (Snijders Tilburg; temperature 28°C, 16 h light, 150 µE m–2 s–1, relative humidity 75%) on cucumber (Cucumis sativus). A second population originated from the floriculture research station in Aalsmeer, The Netherlands (Labculture Netherlands).
Individuals of 33 whitefly populations from crop production areas all over the world were collected in 70% ethanol. DNA was isolated with a DNeasy kit for insect DNA purification (Qiagen Benelux) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The DNA was digested using EcoRI and MseI restriction enzymes resulting in EcoRI/MseI templates. Primer combinations E39/M64, E82/M59, E35/M66, E35/M70, E92/M48, and E92/M61 were selected for the AFLP screen (www.keygene.com/keygene/pdf/PRIMERCO.pdf). Fingerprinting using these primer combinations resulted in a data set of 412 markers that were dominantly scored. The marker score was used to carry out the diversity assessment analyses to categorize the individuals on basis of genetic similarity. NTSYSpc software (Exeter Software; http://www.exetersoftware.com) was used to produce three similarity matrices consisting of similarity indices for all combinations of samples. The genetic similarity matrix was calculated according to the Jaccard coefficient (J = a/n – d). To visualize the relationship between samples, dendrograms were generated using sequential agglomerative hierarchal nested cluster analysis based on the unweighted pair-group method of arithmetic averages. To evaluate the extent of representation of the similarity matrix by the dendrogram, a cophenetic value matrix was calculated. The cophenetic correlations for all dendrograms are between 0.96 and 0.98, which implies that the dendrograms are highly representative of the similarities between the populations.
The biotypes of the two live B. tabaci populations used (Almería B and Labculture Netherlands) were confirmed using a cleaved-amplified polymorphic sequence marker for cytochrome oxidase I (mtCOI) as described by Khasdan et al. (2005)
Volatiles were collected by placing 3-week-old wild tomato plants in a climatized room in large desiccators for 24 h, including a 16-h day period. Desiccators were ventilated with carbon-filtered pressure air at 400 mL min–1. Volatiles were captured on a sampling tube containing 300 mg Tenax resin according to Kant et al. (2004)
Free-choice experiments with B. tabaci were carried out in a greenhouse compartment (28°C, relative humidity 65%). Light was supplied by high-pressure sodium lamps (Hortilex Schréder SON-T PIA GP 600W) with a photosynthetic irradiance of 250 W m–2. The preference behavior of B. tabaci biotype Q (Almería population) and biotype B (Labculture Netherlands) was compared in bioassays with different wild tomatoes (LA1777, LA2560, GI1560, and S. lycopersicum Moneymaker). Three-week-old plants were placed inside a plastic-covered wooden tray (170 x 100 x 20 cm) filled with soil, at equal distance from each other. Two or three hundred adult whiteflies were captured, placed at 4°C for 5 min, and then released in the middle of the setup. Ten and 20 min after release, settled whiteflies were recaptured, and the numbers of whiteflies on each plant were recorded. For each experiment, new, inexperienced whiteflies were used. Since no differential behavior between B. tabaci B and Q was found, all further bioassays were done with the Almería (Q) population. To test whether choice behavior would change in the absence of visual cues, a set of bioassays as described above was repeated with plants individually placed under dark-gray mesh cover (mesh size; 1 mm) (Supplemental Fig. S2). Four very similar 3-week-old cultivated S. lycopersicum plants were used for this experiment: cv Motelle (contains Mi1.2), cv Monalbo, cv Mogeor (contains Mi1.2), and cv Pitenza. First, the distribution of B. tabaci in a setup without mesh covers was ascertained, after which the experiment was repeated with all four plants covered. The pore size of the mesh was big enough for whiteflies to go through, but they were also counted as having made a choice (10 min after release) if they were on the mesh of a particular tomato. The experiment was repeated three times. In the presence of visual cues, on average 75% of the whiteflies released (n = 200) were recovered within 20 min, compared to 46% in the absence of visual cues. To rank the preference of whiteflies for each plant (16 wild and five cultivated), stepwise sequential testing was applied. Six randomly chosen plants were placed inside a plastic-covered wooden tray as described above. Three hundred whiteflies were released in the middle and recaptured from plants after 10 and 20 min, and the distribution was established. Each bioassay was repeated three times with randomized positions of the plants. After each bioassay, the two most attractive plants were replaced by two randomly chosen new plants for a next set of bioassays. This procedure was repeated until all plants were tested. Finally, all plants were retested in a setup with plants with similar repellence scores (again in sets of six) to yield the final ranking. For bioassays with headspace (total headspace or single compounds), four potted tomato plants (S. lycopersicum Moneymaker) were placed in a square setup at a distance of 50 cm from each other. Two hundred whiteflies were released and recorded as described above. To test the effect of selected headspace components on repellence, 10 µg of synthetic standards (Fluka) were applied to 10 filter paper discs (Whatman; 25-mm diameter). The treated discs were attached to one of the four plants with metal wire. The position of the treated tomato was randomized. Five minutes after placing the volatiles on the plant, whiteflies were released. For each component, eight replications were carried out. Treatments were administered in a setup in which compounds were always added to the same plant in comparison to three plants with empty carriers. Prior to each assay with volatiles, the experiment was done with the four plants in an untreated setup, in the same position to allow comparison in the same background. For each volatile compound tested, a new set of plants was used.
A dose-response series of EAG responses of B. tabaci were measured by manual injection of synthetic standards (Fluka) into a humidified air stream passing over the antenna of B. tabaci mounted onto an insect antenna holder, which was housed in a polytetrafluoroethylene cell (flow rate of 250 mL/min). The antenna holder was milled from a perspex disc and adapted to the size of the antennae (Thakeow et al., 2008
Absence, presence, and concentration of terpenes in different headspaces were correlated to repellence rank by multiple-linear regression analyses, and statistical significance was tested by multivariate ANOVA and nonparametric analyses. In the past few years, random forests have become a popular and widely used tool for nonparametric regression in many scientific areas. Random forest was used to validate the ranking order and to identify relevant volatiles influencing the rank variable. The random forest procedure does not require any distributional assumption because it is not model based but algorithm based (Faraway, 2006
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
Salvador A. Gezan is kindly acknowledged for help with the statistical analyses. Ludek Tikovsky, Harold Lemereis, and Thijs Hendrix are acknowledged for taking care of the tomato collection. Received June 9, 2009; accepted August 17, 2009; published August 19, 2009.
1 This work was supported by Senter Novem, Enza Zaden, Vilmorin & Cie, Takii & Co., and De Ruiter Seeds. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Robert C. Schuurink (r.c.schuurink{at}uva.nl).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.109.142661 * Corresponding author; e-mail r.c.schuurink{at}uva.nl.
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