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Abstract
Wild roses store and emit a large array of fragrant monoterpenes from their petals. Maximisation of fragrance coincides with floral maturation in many angiosperms, which enhances pollination efficiency, reduces floral predation, and improves plant fitness. We hypothesized that petal monoterpenes serve additional lifelong functions such as limiting metabolic damage from reactive oxygen species (ROS), and altering isoprenoid hormonal abundance to increase floral lifespan. Petal monoterpenes were quantified at three floral life-stages (unopened bud, open mature, and senescent) in 57 rose species and 16 subspecies originating from Asia, America, and Europe, and relationships among monoterpene richness, petal colour, ROS, hormones, and floral lifespan were analysed within a phylogenetic context. Three distinct types of petal monoterpene profiles, revealing significant developmental and functional differences, were identified: Type A, species where monoterpene abundance peaked in open mature flowers depleting thereafter; Type B, where monoterpenes peaked in senescing flowers increasing from bud stage, and a rare Type C (8 species) where monoterpenes depleted from bud stage to senescence. Cyclic monoterpenes peaked during early floral development, whereas acyclic monoterpenes (dominated by geraniol and its derivatives, often 100-fold more abundant than other monoterpenes) peaked during floral maturation in Type A and B roses. Early-diverging roses were geraniol-poor (often Type C) and white-petalled. Lifetime changes in hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) revealed a significant negative regression with the levels of petal geraniol at all floral life-stages. Geraniol-poor Type C roses also showed higher cytokinins (in buds) and abscisic acid (in mature petals), and significantly shorter floral lifespan compared with geraniol-rich Type A and B roses. We conclude that geraniol enrichment, intensification of petal colour, and lower potential for H2O2-related oxidative damage characterise and likely contribute to longer floral lifespan in monoterpene-rich wild roses.
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1 National Research Council of Italy, Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, Florence, Italy (GRID:grid.5326.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 1940 4177); National Research Council of Italy, Department of Biology, Agriculture and Food Sciences, Rome, Italy (GRID:grid.5326.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 1940 4177)
2 Institute of Heritage Science, National Research Council of Italy, Florence, Italy (GRID:grid.5326.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 1940 4177)
3 National Research Council of Italy, Laboratory for the Analysis and Research in Environmental Chemistry, Institute of Biosciences and Bioresources, Florence, Italy (GRID:grid.5326.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 1940 4177)
4 Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Institute of Life Sciences, Pisa, Italy (GRID:grid.263145.7) (ISNI:0000 0004 1762 600X)
5 National Research Council of Italy, Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, Florence, Italy (GRID:grid.5326.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 1940 4177)
6 National Research Council of Italy, Department of Biology, Agriculture and Food Sciences, Rome, Italy (GRID:grid.5326.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 1940 4177)