Cuticle thickness affects dynamics of volatile emission from petunia flowers

被引:0
|
作者
Pan Liao
Shaunak Ray
Benoît Boachon
Joseph H. Lynch
Arnav Deshpande
Scott McAdam
John A. Morgan
Natalia Dudareva
机构
[1] Purdue University,Department of Biochemistry
[2] Purdue University,Davidson School of Chemical Engineering
[3] Purdue University,Purdue Center for Plant Biology
[4] Purdue University,Department of Botany and Plant Pathology
[5] Purdue University,Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture
[6] BVpam FRE 3727,undefined
[7] Université de Lyon,undefined
[8] Université Jean Monnet Saint-Etienne,undefined
[9] CNRS,undefined
来源
Nature Chemical Biology | 2021年 / 17卷
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摘要
The plant cuticle is the final barrier for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to cross for release to the atmosphere, yet its role in the emission process is poorly understood. Here, using a combination of reverse-genetic and chemical approaches, we demonstrate that the cuticle imposes substantial resistance to VOC mass transfer, acting as a sink/concentrator for VOCs and hence protecting cells from the potentially toxic internal accumulation of these hydrophobic compounds. Reduction in cuticle thickness has differential effects on individual VOCs depending on their volatility, and leads to their internal cellular redistribution, a shift in mass transfer resistance sources and altered VOC synthesis. These results reveal that the cuticle is not simply a passive diffusion barrier for VOCs to cross, but plays the aforementioned complex roles in the emission process as an integral member of the overall VOC network.
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页码:138 / 145
页数:7
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