Metabolites (Oct 2021)

Cascading Effects of Root Microbial Symbiosis on the Development and Metabolome of the Insect Herbivore <i>Manduca sexta</i> L.

  • Dimitra Papantoniou,
  • Fredd Vergara,
  • Alexander Weinhold,
  • Teresa Quijano,
  • Bekzod Khakimov,
  • David I. Pattison,
  • Søren Bak,
  • Nicole M. van Dam,
  • Ainhoa Martínez-Medina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11110731
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. 731

Abstract

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Root mutualistic microbes can modulate the production of plant secondary metabolites affecting plant–herbivore interactions. Still, the main mechanisms underlying the impact of root mutualists on herbivore performance remain ambiguous. In particular, little is known about how changes in the plant metabolome induced by root mutualists affect the insect metabolome and post-larval development. By using bioassays with tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum), we analyzed the impact of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Rhizophagus irregularis and the growth-promoting fungus Trichoderma harzianum on the plant interaction with the specialist insect herbivore Manduca sexta. We found that root colonization by the mutualistic microbes impaired insect development, including metamorphosis. By using untargeted metabolomics, we found that root colonization by the mutualistic microbes altered the secondary metabolism of tomato shoots, leading to enhanced levels of steroidal glycoalkaloids. Untargeted metabolomics further revealed that root colonization by the mutualists affected the metabolome of the herbivore, leading to an enhanced accumulation of steroidal glycoalkaloids and altered patterns of fatty acid amides and carnitine-derived metabolites. Our results indicate that the changes in the shoot metabolome triggered by root mutualistic microbes can cascade up altering the metabolome of the insects feeding on the colonized plants, thus affecting the insect development.

Keywords