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Dive into the research topics where André Kessler is active.

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Featured researches published by André Kessler.


Oecologia | 2006

Priming of plant defense responses in nature by airborne signaling between Artemisia tridentata and Nicotiana attenuata

André Kessler; Rayko Halitschke; Celia Diezel; Ian T. Baldwin

Plants release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in response to wounding and herbivore attack, some of which trigger responses in neighboring unattacked plants in the laboratory under conditions that are not likely to occur in the real world. Whether plants ‘eavesdrop’ on the volatile emissions of their neighbors in nature is not known. The best documented field study of between-species signaling via above-ground VOCs involves increases in fitness parameters of native tobacco (Nicotiana attenuata) transplanted adjacent to clipped sagebrush (Artemesia tridentata tridentata). Clipped sagebrush releases many biologically active VOCs, including methyl jasmonate (MeJA), methacrolein and a series of terpenoid and green leaf VOCs, of which MeJA, while active under laboratory conditions, is not released in sufficient quantities to directly elicit induced resistance in the field. Here we demonstrate, with laboratory and field-based experiments, that priming (rather than direct elicitation) of native N. attenuata’s induced chemical defenses by a sagebrush-released VOC bouquet can account for earlier findings. With microarrays enriched in N. attenuata herbivore-regulated genes, we found transcriptional responses in tobacco growing adjacent to clipped sagebrush foliage, but failed to detect the direct elicitation of defensive chemicals or proteins. However, we observed an accelerated production of trypsin proteinase inhibitors when Manduca sexta caterpillars fed on plants previously exposed to clipped sagebrush. This readying of a defense response, termed priming, results in lower total herbivore damage to plants exposed to clipped sagebrush and in a higher mortality rate of young Manduca caterpillars. Our study demonstrates priming of plant defense responses as a mechanism of plant–plant signaling in nature, and provides an example for the analysis of between-plant signaling under ecologically realistic conditions. Although we describe priming as a potential mechanism for signaling between plants in nature, we critically discuss the ecological relevance of the particular interaction.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2003

Attracting friends to feast on foes: engineering terpene emission to make crop plants more attractive to herbivore enemies

Jörg Degenhardt; Jonathan Gershenzon; Ian T. Baldwin; André Kessler

When attacked by herbivorous insects or mites, some plant species call on other arthropods for help. They emit mixtures of volatile compounds, dominated by terpenes, to attract carnivorous arthropods that prey on or parasitise herbivores and so reduce further damage. This fascinating defence strategy offers a new, environmentally friendly approach to crop protection. Using recent advances in the biochemistry and molecular genetics of terpene biosynthesis, it should now be possible to engineer crop plants that release terpenes for attracting herbivore enemies. By introducing or selectively altering the existing rate of terpene emission and composition, plant breeders could enable attacked plants to attract enemies and reduce additional herbivory, without compromising the effectiveness of other modes of defence.


Oecologia | 2000

Ecophysiological comparison of direct and indirect defenses in Nicotiana attenuata.

Rayko Halitschke; André Kessler; J. Kahl; Andreas Lorenz; Ian T. Baldwin

Abstract After herbivore attack, plants launch a suite of direct and indirect defense responses that must be coordinated if plants are to realize a fitness benefit from these responses. Here we characterize the volatile emissions in the native tobacco plant, Nicotiana attenuata Torr. ex Wats., that are elicited by tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta L.) attack and are known to function as attractants for parasitoids. To provide the first ecophysiological comparison of examples of both types of defense in the same species, we characterize the elicitation and signaling mechanisms, the resources required, and the potential costs and benefits of the volatile release and compare these traits with those of the well-described induced direct defense in this species, nicotine production. The release of (E)-β-ocimene, cis-α-bergamotene and linalool is dramatically induced within 24 h by application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA), caterpillar feeding, and the treatment of mechanical wounds with larval oral secretions (OS), but not by mechanical damage alone. Plants from different geographic locations produce volatile blends that differ in composition. The most consistently released component from all genotypes, cis-α-berga-motene, is positively related to the amount of MeJA and the level of wounding if OS are applied to the wounds. The volatile release is strongly light dependent, dropping to undetectable quantities during dark periods, even when temperatures are elevated to match those of the light period. Inhibitors of wound-induced jasmonate accumulation (salicylates and auxins), which are known to inhibit wound-induced nicotine production, do not inhibit the release of volatiles. By individually inducing different leaf positions with OS and, on other plants, excising them after induction, we demonstrate that the emission is largely a systemic, whole-plant response, which is maximally triggered when the second fully expanded leaf is induced. We conclude that while both are whole-plant, systemic responses that utilize recently acquired resources for their production and are activated by the jasmonate cascade, the elicitation of the volatile release exhibits greater tissue sensitivity and utilizes additional signaling components than does nicotine production. In contrast to the large investment of fitness-limiting resources required for induced nicotine production or the resources used in benzyl acetone release from flowers for pollinator attraction, the resource requirements for the volatile release are minor. Hence the argument that the volatile release incurs comparatively large physiological costs cannot be supported in this system.


Ecology | 2008

CONSTITUTIVE AND INDUCED DEFENSES TO HERBIVORY IN ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND PLANT TISSUES

Ian Kaplan; Rayko Halitschke; André Kessler; Sandra Sardanelli; Robert F. Denno

A recent surge in attention devoted to the ecology of soil biota has prompted interest in quantifying similarities and differences between interactions occurring in above- and belowground communities. Furthermore, linkages that interconnect the dynamics of these two spatially distinct ecosystems are increasingly documented. We use a similar approach in the context of understanding plant defenses to herbivory, including how they are allocated between leaves and roots (constitutive defenses), and potential cross-system linkages (induced defenses). To explore these issues we utilized three different empirical approaches. First, we manipulated foliar and root herbivory on tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) and measured changes in the secondary chemistry of above- and belowground tissues. Second, we reviewed published studies that compared levels of secondary chemistry between leaves and roots to determine how plants distribute putative defense chemicals across the above- and belowground systems. Last, we used meta-analysis to quantify the impact of induced responses across plant tissue types. In the tobacco system, leaf-chewing insects strongly induced higher levels of secondary metabolites in leaves but had no impact on root chemistry. Nematode root herbivores, however, elicited changes in both leaves and roots. Virtually all secondary chemicals measured were elevated in nematode-induced galls, whereas the impact of root herbivory on foliar chemistry was highly variable and depended on where chemicals were produced within the plant. Importantly, nematodes interfered with aboveground metabolites that have biosynthetic sites located in roots (e.g., nicotine) but had the opposite effect (i.e., nematodes elevated foliar expression) on chemicals produced in shoots (e.g., phenolics and terpenoids). Results from our literature review suggest that, overall, constitutive defense levels are extremely similar when comparing leaves with roots, although certain chemical classes (e.g., alkaloids, glucosinolates) are differentially allocated between above- and belowground parts. Based on a meta-analysis of induced defense studies we conclude that: (1) foliar induction generates strong responses in leaves, but much weaker responses in roots, and (2) root induction elicits responses of equal magnitude in both leaves and roots. We discuss the importance of this asymmetry and the paradox of cross-system induction in relation to optimal defense theory and interactions between above- and belowground herbivory.


Ecology Letters | 2008

Physiological integration of roots and shoots in plant defense strategies links above‐ and belowground herbivory

Ian Kaplan; Rayko Halitschke; André Kessler; Brian J. Rehill; Sandra Sardanelli; Robert F. Denno

Roots play a critical, but largely unappreciated, role in aboveground anti-herbivore plant defense (e.g. resistance and tolerance) and root-leaf connections may therefore result in unexpected coupling between above- and belowground consumers. Using the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) system we highlight two examples of this phenomenon. First, the secondary metabolite nicotine is produced in roots, yet translocated aboveground for use as a foliar resistance trait. We demonstrate that nematode root herbivory interferes with foliar nicotine dynamics, resulting in positive effects on aboveground phytophagous insects. Notably, nematode-induced facilitation only occurred on nicotine-producing plants, and not on nicotine-deficient mutants. In the second case, we use stable isotope and invertase enzyme analyses to demonstrate that foliar herbivory elicits a putative tolerance response whereby aboveground nutritional reserves are allocated to roots, resulting in facilitation of phytoparasitic nematodes. Thus, plants integrate roots in resistance and tolerance mechanisms for leaf defense, and such root-leaf connections inherently link the dynamics of above- and belowground consumers.


Ecology | 2003

Ecological costs and benefits correlated with trypsin protease inhibitor production in Nicotiana attenuata

Grit A. Glawe; Jorge A. Zavala; André Kessler; Nicole van Dam; Ian T. Baldwin

Genotypes of the wild tobacco Nicotiana attenuata from different geographic regions in North America vary considerably in the level of constitutive and inducible trypsin protease inhibitors (TrypPIs), a potent direct defense, as well as in the production of herbivore-induced volatiles that function as indirect defense. Genotypes collected from Arizona were found to lack the ability to produce TrypPIs at a transcriptional level, had decreased volatile production, but exhibited nicotine and growth responses that were not distinguishable from genotypes collected in Utah. In field trials with naturally occurring herbivores and in lab experiments with Manduca sexta larvae, Arizona genotypes were damaged more and sustained greater herbivore growth than the Utah genotypes. When Arizona and Utah genotypes were grown in competition, Arizona genotypes produced significantly more seed capsules than the Utah neighbor did. Moreover, jasmonate elicitation, which dramatically increased TrypPI production in only the Utah genotypes, reduced lifetime fitness measures of the Utah genotypes more than of the Arizona genotypes, demonstrating that TrypPI production is correlated with a fitness cost. The loss of both a direct and an indirect defense suggests a functional linkage between these types of defense [KEYWORDS: chemical polymorphism, costs, genetic variation, herbivory, induced defenses, intraspecific plant competition, Nicotiana attenuata, phenotypic plasticity, phenotypic variation, protease inhibitors, volatile emission]


Science | 2010

Evolutionary trade-offs in plants mediate the strength of trophic cascades.

Kailen A. Mooney; Rayko Halitschke; André Kessler; Anurag A. Agrawal

Trophic Trade-Offs There have been many attempts to document and explain the effects of predators on plant biomass in so-called “trophic cascades.” Theory suggests that fast-growing plants are relatively undefended and suffer more from herbivory, which implies a functional trade-off between investment in traits relating to growth and defensive strategies. Mooney et al. (p. 1642; see the Perspective by Hambäck) compared responses to fertilization and aphid predators in 16 milkweed species. As predicted, interspecific variation in the strength of top-down control in terms of a tradeoff with growth was observed. The effect of herbivore predators on plant biomass depends on a trade-off between plant growth and resistance to herbivores. Predators determine herbivore and plant biomass via so-called trophic cascades, and the strength of such effects is influenced by ecosystem productivity. To determine whether evolutionary trade-offs among plant traits influence patterns of trophic control, we manipulated predators and soil fertility and measured impacts of a major herbivore (the aphid Aphis nerii) on 16 milkweed species (Asclepias spp.) in a phylogenetic field experiment. Herbivore density was determined by variation in predation and trade-offs between herbivore resistance and plant growth strategy. Neither herbivore density nor predator effects on herbivores predicted the cascading effects of predators on plant biomass. Instead, cascade strength was strongly and positively associated with milkweed response to soil fertility. Accordingly, contemporary patterns of trophic control are driven by evolutionary convergent trade-offs faced by plants.


New Phytologist | 2010

Pollinators exert natural selection on flower size and floral display in Penstemon digitalis.

Amy L. Parachnowitsch; André Kessler

• A major gap in our understanding of floral evolution, especially micro-evolutionary processes, is the role of pollinators in generating patterns of natural selection on floral traits. Here we explicitly tested the role of pollinators in selecting floral traits in a herbaceous perennial, Penstemon digitalis. • We manipulated the effect of pollinators on fitness through hand pollinations and compared phenotypic selection in open- and hand-pollinated plants. • Despite the lack of pollen limitation in our population, pollinators mediated selection on floral size and floral display. Hand pollinations removed directional selection for larger flowers and stabilizing selection on flower number, suggesting that pollinators were the agents of selection on both of these traits. • We reviewed studies that measured natural selection on floral traits by biotic agents and generally found stronger signatures of selection imposed by pollinators than by herbivores and co-flowering plant species.


New Phytologist | 2012

Phenotypic selection to increase floral scent emission, but not flower size or colour in bee‐pollinated Penstemon digitalis

Amy L. Parachnowitsch; Robert A. Raguso; André Kessler

Fragrance is a putatively important character in the evolution of flowering plants, but natural selection on scent is rarely studied and thus poorly understood. We characterized floral scent composition and emission in a common garden of Penstemon digitalis from three nearby source populations. We measured phenotypic selection on scent as well as floral traits more frequently examined, such as floral phenology, display size, corolla pigment, and inflorescence height. Scent differed among populations in a common garden, underscoring the potential for scent to be shaped by differential selection pressures. Phenotypic selection on flower number and display size was strong. However, selection favoured scent rather than flower size or colour, suggesting that smelling stronger benefits reproductive success in P. digitalis. Linalool was a direct target of selection and its high frequency in floral-scent bouquets suggests that further studies of both pollinator- and antagonist-mediated selection on this compound would further our understanding of scent evolution. Our results indicate that chemical dimensions of floral display are just as likely as other components to experience selective pressure in a nonspecialized flowering herb. Therefore, studies that integrate visual and chemical floral traits should better reflect the true nature of floral evolutionary ecology.


Ecology | 2002

MANDUCA QUINQUEMACULATA'S OPTIMIZATION OF INTRA‐PLANT OVIPOSITION TO PREDATION, FOOD QUALITY, AND THERMAL CONSTRAINTS

André Kessler; Ian T. Baldwin

To examine the hypothesis that intra-plant oviposition preferences of Man- duca quinquemaculata on Nicotiana attenuate optimize predation risk and nutritional needs of developing larvae and eggs, we measured oviposition behavior of adults and larval mortality, movement, performance, and body temperatures at different leaf positions in a natural population. Nearly 70% of the eggs were oviposited on young central stem leaves of elongated plants. Intra-plant movement was very rare in the first and common in the second to fourth larval instars. The oviposition preference for, and larval movement toward, younger leaves was correlated with a 40% lower predation risk and a 6.3-fold greater mass gain, suggesting higher nutritive value despite 2. 1-fold higher nicotine concentrations and 4.6-fold higher polyphenol oxidase activities. The predatory bug, Geocoris pallens, which consumed eggs and larvae with instar- and leaf position-specific preferences, was respon- sible for the vast majority of M. quinquemaculata mortality and may shape the moths oviposition preference.

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Erik H. Poelman

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Katja Poveda

University of Göttingen

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