Planta. 2025 Dec 22;263(1):33. doi: 10.1007/s00425-025-04898-5.
ABSTRACT
To elucidate the phytobiochemical mechanisms underlying differentiation among wild populations of Tithonia diversifolia (Helms) A. Gray and establish how soil parameters regulate metabolic pathways.
METHODS: 90 individuals from three populations (Ixtaczoquitlán, Orizaba, Rafael Delgado; Veracruz, Mexico) were analyzed. A multi-analytical approach included lipid profiling by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), identification of secondary metabolites via HPTLC, quantitative bromatological analyses, photosynthetic pigment quantification, and comprehensive edaphoclimatic characterization. Statistical modeling integrated soil chemistry, climatic dynamics, and phytobiochemical responses.
RESULTS: Populations exhibited distinct metabolic phenotypes shaped by edaphic stress. Plants from Rafael Delgado expressed a classical hormetic response under moderate stress (neutral pH, high EC and CEC, low organic matter, clayey soil), with upregulation of biosynthetic pathways resulting in higher protein content (27.25 ± 1.12% DW) and a diverse fatty acid profile (seven compounds). In contrast, Ixtaczoquitlán and Orizaba populations, under more favorable soils, maintained homeostatic regulation prioritizing primary metabolism, with higher chlorophyll accumulation (1.96 ± 0.10 mg g-1) but reduced synthesis of defensive compounds. Foliar pH remained stable (6.7 ± 0.3) across sites, suggesting a robust self-regulation capacity despite edaphoclimatic variability.
CONCLUSIONS: Stress-induced metabolic switching emerges as a key adaptive mechanism in this non-model species, highlighting how environmental gradients reprogram biosynthetic pathways. Hormesis-driven enhancement of bioactive compounds positions T. diversifolia as a promising system for biotechnology aimed at stress-induced biocompound production. These findings advance the state of the art in plant metabolic plasticity and support the sustainable exploitation of renewable ethnobotanical resources.
PMID:41428232 | DOI:10.1007/s00425-025-04898-5