TY - JOUR
T1 - Freeze-induced cyanide toxicity does not maintain the cyanogenesis polymorphism in white clover (Trifolium repens)
AU - Kooyers, Nicholas J.
AU - Hartman Bakken, Bradley
AU - Ungerer, Mark C.
AU - Olsen, Kenneth M.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank the Washington University in St. Louis green-house staff for plant growth assistance. Helpful comments on this manuscript were provided by two anonymous reviewers. Support for this work was provided by Washington University in St. Louis, a NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant to N.J.K. (DEB-1110588) and NSF grants (DEB-0845497 & IOS-1557770) to K.M.O.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Botanical Society of America
PY - 2018/7
Y1 - 2018/7
N2 - Premise of the Study: The maintenance of adaptive polymorphisms within species requires fitness trade-offs reflecting selection for each morph. Cyanogenesis, the ability to produce hydrogen cyanide (HCN) after tissue damage, occurs in >3000 plant species and exists as a discrete polymorphism in white clover. This polymorphism is spatially distributed in recurrent clines, with higher frequencies of cyanogenic plants in warmer climates. The HCN autotoxicity hypothesis proposes that cyanogenic plants are selected against where frosts are common, as freezing liberates HCN and could impair cellular respiration. Methods: We tested the HCN autotoxicity hypothesis using a freezing chamber to examine survival, tissue damage, and physiological recovery as assessed via chlorophyll fluorescence following mild and severe freezing treatments. We utilized 65 genotypes from a single polymorphic population to eliminate effects of population structure. Key Results: Cyanogenic plants did not differ from acyanogenic plants in survival, tissue damage, or recovery following freezing. However, plants producing either of the two required cyanogenic precursors had lower survival and tissue damage after freezing than plants lacking both precursors. Conclusions: These results suggest that freezing-induced HCN toxicity is unlikely to be responsible for the maintenance of the cyanogenesis polymorphism in white clover. However, energetic trade-offs associated with costs of producing the cyanogenic precursors may confer a fitness benefit to acyanogenic plants under stressful climatic conditions. The lack of evidence for HCN toxicity suggests that cyanogenic clover uses physiological mechanisms mediated by β-cyanoalanine synthase and alternative oxidase to maintain cellular function in the presence of HCN.
AB - Premise of the Study: The maintenance of adaptive polymorphisms within species requires fitness trade-offs reflecting selection for each morph. Cyanogenesis, the ability to produce hydrogen cyanide (HCN) after tissue damage, occurs in >3000 plant species and exists as a discrete polymorphism in white clover. This polymorphism is spatially distributed in recurrent clines, with higher frequencies of cyanogenic plants in warmer climates. The HCN autotoxicity hypothesis proposes that cyanogenic plants are selected against where frosts are common, as freezing liberates HCN and could impair cellular respiration. Methods: We tested the HCN autotoxicity hypothesis using a freezing chamber to examine survival, tissue damage, and physiological recovery as assessed via chlorophyll fluorescence following mild and severe freezing treatments. We utilized 65 genotypes from a single polymorphic population to eliminate effects of population structure. Key Results: Cyanogenic plants did not differ from acyanogenic plants in survival, tissue damage, or recovery following freezing. However, plants producing either of the two required cyanogenic precursors had lower survival and tissue damage after freezing than plants lacking both precursors. Conclusions: These results suggest that freezing-induced HCN toxicity is unlikely to be responsible for the maintenance of the cyanogenesis polymorphism in white clover. However, energetic trade-offs associated with costs of producing the cyanogenic precursors may confer a fitness benefit to acyanogenic plants under stressful climatic conditions. The lack of evidence for HCN toxicity suggests that cyanogenic clover uses physiological mechanisms mediated by β-cyanoalanine synthase and alternative oxidase to maintain cellular function in the presence of HCN.
KW - Fabaceae
KW - Trifolium repens
KW - adaptive clines
KW - alternative oxidase (AOX)
KW - cyanogenic glucosides
KW - freezing tolerance
KW - white clover
KW - β-cyanoalanine synthase (β-CAS)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85051285601&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/ajb2.1134
DO - 10.1002/ajb2.1134
M3 - Article
C2 - 30080261
AN - SCOPUS:85051285601
SN - 0002-9122
VL - 105
SP - 1224
EP - 1231
JO - American Journal of Botany
JF - American Journal of Botany
IS - 7
ER -