| Literature DB >> 29304384 |
Astrid Kännaste1, Lauri Laanisto2, Leila Pazouki3, Lucian Copolovici4, Marina Suhorutšenko5, Muhammad Azeem6, Lauri Toom7, Anna-Karin Borg-Karlson8, Ülo Niinemets9.
Abstract
Diterpenoids constitute an important part of oleoresin in conifer needles, but the environmental and genetic controls on diterpenoid composition are poorly known. We studied the presence of diterpenoids in four pine populations spanning an extensive range of nitrogen (N) availability. In most samples, isoabienol was the main diterpenoid. Additionally, low contents of (Z)-biformene, abietadiene isomers, manoyl oxide isomers, labda-7,13,14-triene and labda-7,14-dien-13-ol were quantified in pine needles. According to the occurrence and content of diterpenoids it was possible to distinguish 'non diterpenoid pines', 'high isoabienol pines', 'manoyl oxide - isoabienol pines' and 'other diterpenoid pines'. 'Non diterpenoid pines', 'high isoabienol pines' and 'other diterpenoid pines' were characteristic to the dry forest, yet the majority of pines (>80%) of the bog Laeva represented 'high isoabienol pines'. 'Manoyl oxide - isoabienol pines' were present only in the wet sites. Additionally, orthogonal partial least-squares analysis showed, that in the bogs foliar nitrogen content per dry mass (NM) correlated to diterpenoids. Significant correlations existed between abietadienes, isoabienol and foliar NM in 'manoyl oxide - isoabienol pines', and chemotypic variation was also associated by population genetic distance estimated by nuclear microsatellite markers. Previously, the presence of low and high Δ-3-carene pines has been demonstrated, but the results of the current study indicate that also diterpenoids form an independent axis of chemotypic differentiation. Further studies are needed to understand whether the enhanced abundance of diterpenoids in wetter sites reflects a phenotypic or genotypic response.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotypic variability; Diterpenoids; Isoabienol; N content; Pinus sylvestris L.; Terpenoid signatures
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29304384 PMCID: PMC6020065 DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2017.12.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phytochemistry ISSN: 0031-9422 Impact factor: 4.072