| Literature DB >> 24096821 |
Yong Fang1, Xiaoguo Jiao, Wen Xie, Shaoli Wang, Qingjun Wu, Xiaobin Shi, Gong Chen, Qi Su, Xin Yang, Huipeng Pan, Youjun Zhang.
Abstract
Bemisia tabaci, the whitefly vector of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), seriously reduces tomato production and quality. Here, we report the first evidence that infection by TYLCV alters the host preferences of invasive B. tabaci B (Middle East-Minor Asia 1) and Q (Mediterranean genetic group), in which TYLCV-free B. tabaci Q preferred to settle on TYLCV-infected tomato plants over healthy ones. TYLCV-free B. tabaci B, however, preferred healthy tomato plants to TYLCV-infected plants. In contrast, TYLCV-infected B. tabaci, either B or Q, did not exhibit a preference between TYLCV-infected and TYLCV-free tomato plants. Based on gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCMS)analysis of plant terpene volatiles, significantly more β-myrcene, thymene, β-phellandrene, caryophyllene, (+)-4-carene, and α-humulene were released from the TYLCV-free tomato plants than from the TYLCV-infected ones. The results indicate TYLCV can alter the host preferences of its vector Bemisia tabaci B and Q.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24096821 PMCID: PMC3791452 DOI: 10.1038/srep02876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Symptoms of (A) healthy and (B) TYLCV-infected tomato plants.
Photographs by Yong Fang.
Figure 2Viral load in healthy and TYLCV-infected tomato plants.
Figure 3Proportion of B. tabaci B and Q individuals that settled on healthy vs. TYLCV-infected tomato plants in a choice test.
B. tabaci B and Q settling on TYLCV-free (open circles) versus TYLCV-infected tomato plants (closed circles) in two choice laboratory bioassays: (A) noninfected B. tabaci B; (B) TYLCV-infected B. tabaci B; (C) noninfected B. tabaci Q; and (D) TYLCV-infected B. tabaci Q. The numbers of adult whiteflies are also shown in the figure: the red number indicates the number of whiteflies on the healthy plant, and the blue number indicates the number of whiteflies on the TYLCV-infected plant.
Figure 4Total ion chromatograms of volatile compounds released by the healthy tomato plants and the TYLCV-infected tomato plants.
The identified compounds which have significant difference between the healthy tomato plants and the TYLCV-infected tomato plants:1 = β-Myrcene, 2 = (+)-4-Carene, 3 = Thymene, 4 = β-Phellandrene, 5 = β-Caryophyllene, 6 = α-Humulene.
The peak areas (×1000) of volatile constituents released from TYLCV-infected and TYLCV-free tomato plants (mean ± SE)
| Compound | Retention time | TYLCV-infected plants | TYLCV-free plants | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β-Myrcene | 7.33 | 127.02 ± 20.20 a | 229.38 ± 24.67 b | 0.022 |
| (+)-4-Carene | 7.62 | 0 a | 2411.89 ± 482.71 b | 0.008 |
| Thymene | 8.37 | 768.81 ± 22.34 a | 1240.71 ± 296.90 b | 0.036 |
| β-Phellandrene | 8.52 | 5607.10 ± 217.80 a | 9078.92 ± 2135.28 b | 0.038 |
| β-Caryophyllene | 19.67 | 227.70 ± 14.90 a | 375.22 ± 80.17 b | 0.024 |
| α-Humulene | 20.63 | 91.724 ± 4.18 a | 148.30 ± 35.15 b | 0.035 |
| Butylated Hydroxytoluene | 21.82 | 208.16 ± 42.35 a | 351.00 ± 65.31 b | 0.374 |
| α-Phellandrene | 7.83 | 1210.39 ± 37.56 a | 1742.48 ± 678.30 a | 0.097 |
| α-Terpinene | 8.12 | 254.93 ± 5.89 a | 376.00 ± 133.86 a | 0.076 |
| γ-Butyrolactone | 5.85 | 29.52 ± 15.18 a | 53.81 ± 5.23 a | 0.141 |
| α-Pinene | 5.93 | 623.57 ± 5.65 a | 979.58 ± 267.56 a | 0.052 |
Within each row, different letters indicate significant differences between virus-infected and virus-free plants (P < 0.05).
Figure 5Selection of healthy vs. TYLCV-infected tomato plants by Bemisia tabaci.
Photographs by Yong Fang.