Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed

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Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed. / Ahlstrand, Natalie Eva Iwanycki; Havskov Reghev, Nicoline; Markussen, Bo; Hansen, Hans Chr. Bruun; Eiriksson, Finnur; Thorsteinsdottir, Margrét; Rønsted, Nina; Barnes, Christopher James.

In: Ecology and Evolution, Vol. 8, No. 13, 2018, p. 6812-6826.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ahlstrand, NEI, Havskov Reghev, N, Markussen, B, Hansen, HCB, Eiriksson, F, Thorsteinsdottir, M, Rønsted, N & Barnes, CJ 2018, 'Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed', Ecology and Evolution, vol. 8, no. 13, pp. 6812-6826. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4195

APA

Ahlstrand, N. E. I., Havskov Reghev, N., Markussen, B., Hansen, H. C. B., Eiriksson, F., Thorsteinsdottir, M., Rønsted, N., & Barnes, C. J. (2018). Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed. Ecology and Evolution, 8(13), 6812-6826. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4195

Vancouver

Ahlstrand NEI, Havskov Reghev N, Markussen B, Hansen HCB, Eiriksson F, Thorsteinsdottir M et al. Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed. Ecology and Evolution. 2018;8(13):6812-6826. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4195

Author

Ahlstrand, Natalie Eva Iwanycki ; Havskov Reghev, Nicoline ; Markussen, Bo ; Hansen, Hans Chr. Bruun ; Eiriksson, Finnur ; Thorsteinsdottir, Margrét ; Rønsted, Nina ; Barnes, Christopher James. / Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed. In: Ecology and Evolution. 2018 ; Vol. 8, No. 13. pp. 6812-6826.

Bibtex

@article{4530576f053949d9986789013d92e5d9,
title = "Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed",
abstract = "Plants produce a multitude of metabolites that contribute to their fitness and survival, and play a role in local adaptation to environmental conditions. The effects of environmental variation is particularly well studied within the genus Plantago, however, previous studies have largely focused on targeting specific metabolites. Studies exploring metabolite wide changes are lacking, and the effects of natural environmental variation and herbivory on the metabolomes of plants growing in situ remain unknown. An untargeted metabolomic approach using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, coupled with variation partitioning, general linear mixed modelling, and network analysis was used to detect differences in metabolic phenotypes of Plantago major in fifteen natural populations across Denmark. Geographic region, distance, habitat type, phenological stage, soil parameters, light levels, and leafarea, were investigated for their relative contributions to explaining differences in foliar metabolomes. Herbivory effects were further investigated by comparing metabolomes from damaged and undamaged leaves from each plant. Geographic region explained the greatest number of significant metabolic differences. Soil pH had the second largest effect, followed by habitat and leaf area, whilst phenological stage had no effect. No evidence of the induction of metabolic features was found between leaves damaged by herbivores compared to undamaged leaves on the same plant. Differences in metabolic phenotypes explained by geographic factors are attributed to genotypic variation and/or unmeasured environmental factors that differ at the regional level in Denmark. A small number of specialised features in the metabolome may be involved infacilitating the success of a widespread species such as Plantago major into such wide range of environmental conditions, though overall resilience in the metabolome was found in response to environmental parameters tested. Untargeted metabolomic approaches have great potential to improve our understanding of how specialised plant metabolites respond to environmental change and assist in adaptation to local conditions.",
author = "Ahlstrand, {Natalie Eva Iwanycki} and {Havskov Reghev}, Nicoline and Bo Markussen and Hansen, {Hans Chr. Bruun} and Finnur Eiriksson and Margr{\'e}t Thorsteinsdottir and Nina R{\o}nsted and Barnes, {Christopher James}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1002/ece3.4195",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "6812--6826",
journal = "Ecology and Evolution",
issn = "2045-7758",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "13",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Untargeted metabolic profiling reveals geography as the strongest predictor of metabolic phenotypes of a cosmopolitan weed

AU - Ahlstrand, Natalie Eva Iwanycki

AU - Havskov Reghev, Nicoline

AU - Markussen, Bo

AU - Hansen, Hans Chr. Bruun

AU - Eiriksson, Finnur

AU - Thorsteinsdottir, Margrét

AU - Rønsted, Nina

AU - Barnes, Christopher James

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Plants produce a multitude of metabolites that contribute to their fitness and survival, and play a role in local adaptation to environmental conditions. The effects of environmental variation is particularly well studied within the genus Plantago, however, previous studies have largely focused on targeting specific metabolites. Studies exploring metabolite wide changes are lacking, and the effects of natural environmental variation and herbivory on the metabolomes of plants growing in situ remain unknown. An untargeted metabolomic approach using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, coupled with variation partitioning, general linear mixed modelling, and network analysis was used to detect differences in metabolic phenotypes of Plantago major in fifteen natural populations across Denmark. Geographic region, distance, habitat type, phenological stage, soil parameters, light levels, and leafarea, were investigated for their relative contributions to explaining differences in foliar metabolomes. Herbivory effects were further investigated by comparing metabolomes from damaged and undamaged leaves from each plant. Geographic region explained the greatest number of significant metabolic differences. Soil pH had the second largest effect, followed by habitat and leaf area, whilst phenological stage had no effect. No evidence of the induction of metabolic features was found between leaves damaged by herbivores compared to undamaged leaves on the same plant. Differences in metabolic phenotypes explained by geographic factors are attributed to genotypic variation and/or unmeasured environmental factors that differ at the regional level in Denmark. A small number of specialised features in the metabolome may be involved infacilitating the success of a widespread species such as Plantago major into such wide range of environmental conditions, though overall resilience in the metabolome was found in response to environmental parameters tested. Untargeted metabolomic approaches have great potential to improve our understanding of how specialised plant metabolites respond to environmental change and assist in adaptation to local conditions.

AB - Plants produce a multitude of metabolites that contribute to their fitness and survival, and play a role in local adaptation to environmental conditions. The effects of environmental variation is particularly well studied within the genus Plantago, however, previous studies have largely focused on targeting specific metabolites. Studies exploring metabolite wide changes are lacking, and the effects of natural environmental variation and herbivory on the metabolomes of plants growing in situ remain unknown. An untargeted metabolomic approach using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, coupled with variation partitioning, general linear mixed modelling, and network analysis was used to detect differences in metabolic phenotypes of Plantago major in fifteen natural populations across Denmark. Geographic region, distance, habitat type, phenological stage, soil parameters, light levels, and leafarea, were investigated for their relative contributions to explaining differences in foliar metabolomes. Herbivory effects were further investigated by comparing metabolomes from damaged and undamaged leaves from each plant. Geographic region explained the greatest number of significant metabolic differences. Soil pH had the second largest effect, followed by habitat and leaf area, whilst phenological stage had no effect. No evidence of the induction of metabolic features was found between leaves damaged by herbivores compared to undamaged leaves on the same plant. Differences in metabolic phenotypes explained by geographic factors are attributed to genotypic variation and/or unmeasured environmental factors that differ at the regional level in Denmark. A small number of specialised features in the metabolome may be involved infacilitating the success of a widespread species such as Plantago major into such wide range of environmental conditions, though overall resilience in the metabolome was found in response to environmental parameters tested. Untargeted metabolomic approaches have great potential to improve our understanding of how specialised plant metabolites respond to environmental change and assist in adaptation to local conditions.

U2 - 10.1002/ece3.4195

DO - 10.1002/ece3.4195

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

SP - 6812

EP - 6826

JO - Ecology and Evolution

JF - Ecology and Evolution

SN - 2045-7758

IS - 13

ER -

ID: 195370321