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Sesquiterpenes from Ambrosia artemisiifolia and their allelopathy

Zhixiang Liu, Nan Zhang, Xiaoqing Ma, Tong Zhang, Xuan Li, Ge Tian, Yulong Feng, Tong An

2022Frontiers in Plant Science11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ambrosia artemisiifolia , an invasive plant, has seriously harmed the agricultural production, native ecosystems and human health. Allelopathy is an important reason for the successful invasion of this alien plant. However, the chemical basis, action effects, action mechanism and release pathway of its allelopathy remain unclear. To address these problems, four sesquiterpenes ( 1 – 4 ), consisting of three new sesquiterpenes ( 1 – 2 , 4 ), were isolated from the whole plant of A. artemisiifolia using a variety of column chromatography techniques, and identified using HR-ESIMS, 1D-NMR, 2D-NMR, and ECD. All the compounds exhibited different levels of inhibitory effects on three native plants ( Setaria viridis , Digitaria sanguinalis , Chenopodium album ) and one model plant ( Arabidopsis thaliana ), especially compound 1 . In addition, the preliminary action mechanism of active compound 1 was revealed by FDA/PI staining assay. Furthermore, the allelopathic substances 1 – 3 were released into environment through the root secretion pathway by UPLC-MS/MS analyses.

Topics & Concepts

AllelopathyAmbrosia artemisiifoliaDigitaria sanguinalisSetaria viridisChenopodiumBotanyBiologyBioassayWeedGerminationEcologyRagweedAllergyImmunologyAllelopathy and phytotoxic interactionsEssential Oils and Antimicrobial ActivityPlant Toxicity and Pharmacological Properties