Transcriptional Reprogramming Deploys a Compartmentalized ‘Timebomb’ in Catharanthus roseus to Fend Off Chewing Herbivores

Yongliang Liu, Jizhe Shi, Barunava Patra, Sanjay Kumar Singh, Xia Wu, Ruiqing Lyu, Xiaoyu Liu, Yongqing Li, Ying Wang, Xuguo Zhou, Sitakanta Pattanaik, Ling Yuan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The evolutionary arms race between plants and insects has led to key adaptive innovations that drive diversification. Alkaloids are well-documented anti-herbivory compounds in plant chemical defences, but how these specialized metabolites are allocated to cope with both biotic and abiotic stresses concomitantly is largely unknown. To examine how plants prioritize their metabolic resources responding to herbivory and cold, we integrated dietary toxicity bioassay in insects with co-expression analysis, hierarchical clustering, promoter assay, and protein–protein interaction in plants. Catharanthus roseus, a medicinal plant known for its insecticidal property against chewing herbivores, produces two terpenoid indole alkaloid monomers, vindoline and catharanthine. Individually, they exhibited negligible toxicity against Manduca sexta, a chewing herbivore; their condensed product, anhydrovinblastine; however, was highly toxic. Such a unique insecticidal mode of action demonstrates that terpenoid indole alkaloid ‘timebomb’ can only be activated when the two spatially isolated monomeric precursors are dimerized by herbivory. Without initial selection pressure and apparent fitness costs, this adaptive chemical defence against herbivory is innovative and sustainable. The biosynthesis of insecticidal terpenoid indole alkaloids is induced by herbivory but suppressed by cold. Here, we identified a transcription factor, herbivore-induced vindoline-gene Expression (HIVE), that coordinates the production of terpenoid indole alkaloids in response to herbivory and cold stress. The HIVE-mediated transcriptional reprogramming allows this herbaceous perennial to allocate its metabolic resources for chemical defence at a normal temperature when herbivory pressure is high, but switches to cold tolerance under a cooler temperature when insect infestation is secondary.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3236-3256
Number of pages21
JournalPlant, Cell and Environment
Volume48
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Plant, Cell & Environment published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Funding

We thank Megan Combs (Department of Civil Engineering and Environmental Research Training Laboratories, University of Kentucky) for assistance with LC\u2013MS/MS analyses. This work is partially supported by the Harold R. Burton Endowed Professorship to L.Y., the C. W. Kearns, C. L. Metcalf, and W. P. Flint Endowed Chair Professorship in Insect Toxicology to X.Z., and National Key Crop Research Institute, Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic Improvement Open Research Fund (NYGC202202).

FundersFunder number
National Key Crop Research Institute
Department of Civil Engineering and Environmental Research Training Laboratories
University of Kentucky
Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences
Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic Improvement Open Research FundNYGC202202

    Keywords

    • Catharanthus roseus
    • cold tolerance
    • herbivory resistance
    • insect–plant interaction
    • terpenoid indole alkaloid
    • timebomb
    • transcriptional reprogramming

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Physiology
    • Plant Science

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