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Selenium accumulation protects plants from herbivory by Orthoptera via toxicity and deterrence
Authors:Freeman John L  Lindblom Stormy Dawn  Quinn Colin F  Fakra Sirine  Marcus Matthew A  Pilon-Smits Elizabeth A H
Affiliation:Biology Department, Program in Molecular Plant Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA.
Abstract:To investigate whether selenium (Se) accumulation in plants provides a chemical defense against generalist insect herbivores, the feeding preference and performance of a mix of orthopteran species were investigated. The selenium hyperaccumulator Stanleya pinnata and accumulator Brassica juncea were used in herbivory studies in the laboratory, and S. pinnata was also used in a manipulative field experiment. In laboratory studies, both crickets and grasshoppers avoided plants pretreated with selenate, while those given no choice died after eating leaves with elevated Se (447 +/- 68 and 230 +/- 68 microg Se g(-1) DW, respectively). B. juncea has previously been shown to accumulate selenate, while S. pinnata hyperaccumulates methyl-selenocysteine. Thus, these findings demonstrate that both inorganic and organic forms of selenium protect plants from herbivory. Grasshoppers fed S. pinnata contained methylselenocysteine in their midgut and absorbed this form into surrounding tissues. In a manipulative field experiment, methylselenocysteine protected S. pinnata from invertebrate herbivory and increased its long-term survival rate over an entire growth season. * In native habitats of selenium hyperaccumulators, orthopterans represent a major group of insect herbivores. Protection offered by organic selenium accumulation against these herbivores may have promoted the evolution of selenium hyperaccumulation in plants.
Keywords:Brassica juncea    deterrence    elemental defense    herbivory protection    Orthoptera    selenium (Se) hyperaccumulator    Stanleya pinnata    toxicity
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