| Literature DB >> 34371594 |
Roberta Paulert1, Roberta Ascrizzi2, Silvia Malatesta3, Paolo Berni3, Miguel Daniel Noseda4, Mariana Mazetto de Carvalho4, Ilaria Marchioni3, Luisa Pistelli2,5, Maria Eugênia Rabello Duarte4, Lorenzo Mariotti3, Laura Pistelli3,5.
Abstract
Natural elicitors from macroalgae may affect plant secondary metabolites. Ulvan is a sulfated heteropolysaccharide extracted from green seaweed, acting as both a plant biotic protecting agent, and a plant elicitor, leading to the synthesis of signal molecules. In this work, the aqueous extract of Ulva intestinalis L., mainly composed of ulvan, was used as foliar-spraying treatment and its eliciting effect was investigated in basil (Ocimum basilicum L.) and parsley (Petroselinum crispum L.). Antioxidant metabolites (polyphenols and carotenoids), volatile compounds (both in headspace emissions and hydrodistilled essential oils), and hormones (jasmonic acid, salicylic acid, salicylic acid 2-O-β-D-glucoside, abscisic acid, and azelaic acid) were quantified. The foliar-spraying treatment with U. intestinalis extract increased salicylic acid and its β-glucoside in parsley; in basil, it induced the accumulation of jasmonic and abscisic acids, indicating the presence of a priming effect. In basil, the elicitation caused a change of the essential oil (EO) chemotype from methyl eugenol/eugenol to epi-α-cadinol and increased sesquiterpenes. In parsley EO it caused a significant accumulation of 1,3,8-p-menthatriene, responsible of the typical "parsley-like" smell. In both species, the phenylpropanoids decreased in headspace and EO compositions, while the salicylic acid concentration increased; this could indicate a primarily defensive response to U. intestinalis extract. Due to the evidenced significant biological activity, U. intestinalis extract used as an elicitor may represent a suitable tool to obtain higher amounts of metabolites for optimizing plant flavor metabolites.Entities:
Keywords: elicitor; essential oil; macroalgae polysaccharide; plant hormones; priming effect; seaweed extract; secondary metabolites
Year: 2021 PMID: 34371594 DOI: 10.3390/plants10071391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747