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Phenolic and lipophilic metabolite adjustments in Olea europaea (olive) trees during drought stress and recovery.

Authors :
Dias, Maria Celeste
Pinto, Diana C.G.A.
Figueiredo, Catarina
Santos, Conceição
Silva, Artur M.S.
Source :
Phytochemistry. May2021, Vol. 185, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The frequency of combined stress events is increasing due to climate change and represents a new threat to olive (Olea europaea) culture. How olive plants modulate their profile of metabolites under multiple stressing agents remains to unveil, although several metabolites affect plants' resilience, and olive production and quality. Young olive plants were exposed to a water deficit (WD) for 30 days and then exposed to a shock of heat and high UVB-radiation (WDHS+UVB treatment) for 2 days. Then, plants were re-watered and grown under optimal conditions (recovery) for 30 days. Leaves were collected after stress and recovery, analysed by liquid and gas chromatography, and the lipophilic and phenolic profiles were characterized. Except for the oleuropein derivatives, the qualitative metabolite profile was similar during stress and recovery. Metabolite increases or decreases in response to stress were stronger when WD was followed by WDHS+UVB treatment. Phenolic compounds (luteolin-7- O -glucoside, quercetin-3- O -rutinoside, apigenin-7- O -glucoside, chrysoeriol-7- O -glucoside, kaempferol derivatives, oleuropein, and lucidumoside C) were the most involved after WD and WDHS+UVB, possibly acting as reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavengers. Lipophilic compounds were more relevant during the recovery period. The catabolism of fatty acids and carbohydrates may provide the necessary energy for plant performance reestablishment, and sterols, long-chain alkanes, and terpenes metabolic pathways may be shifted for the production of compounds with a more important stress protection role. This work highlights for the first time that tolerance mechanisms activated by WD in olive plants are related to metabolite changes, that are adjusted when other stressors are overlapped (WDHS+UVB), and also help the plants recover. This metabolites' plasticity represents an essential contribution to understanding how dry-farming olive orchards may deal with drought combined with high UV-B or heat. [Display omitted] • WD and WDHS+UVB activate the same metabolite responses. • WDHS+UVB induce a stronger metabolite quantity change. • Polyphenols are the most involved to counteract the stress negative effects. • Lipophilic metabolites are more involved in physiological reestablishment after stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00319422
Volume :
185
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Phytochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149734994
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2021.112695