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Identification of Plant Response to the Human Behavior of Crushing Plants

  • Kim, Kwang Jin (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Kim, Hyeon Ju (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Son, Deokjoo (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Jeong, Na Ra (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Yun, Hyung Gewon (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Han, Seung Won (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • You, Soojin (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Kim, Chan-joong (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration) ;
  • Lee, Seon Hwa (Urban Agriculture Research Division, National Institute of Horticultural & Herbal Science, Rural Development Administration)
  • Received : 2019.11.27
  • Accepted : 2019.12.15
  • Published : 2019.12.31

Abstract

We identified how plants affected by the human behavior of crushing plants respond and what kind of plants responded sensitively. We investigated Lactuca sativa "Gaesebadak", Syneilesis palmata and Peucedanum japonicum as plants that humans use for edible purposes, and Achyranthes japonica and Bidens bipinnata as wild plants that stick to people's clothes and disperse seed. Plants exposed to human breathing air were compared with those exposed to human breathing air after being crushed. Methyl jasmonate (MeJA), a chemical word, was measured using Syft/MS, which detects real-time VOC, and related genes were analyzed. The amount of MeJA of Syneilesis palmata and Peucedanum japonicum as edible plants was greater than that of non-edible plants that disperse seeds using humans. The amount of MeJA ranged from 0.20 ppb to 0.35 ppb when the control group were not exposed to human breathing air. On the other hand, MeJA decreased after increasing for the first hour in human breathing air. Also, MeJA affected by human breathing after crushing plants was higher than that affected by just human breathing air. Peucedanum japonicum showed the most distinctive difference between the treatment with human breathing after crushing plants and the treatment with just human breathing. In addition, the gene activity of JAR1 and JMT increased 3 hours after the treatment with human breathing after crushing plants. Therefore, in the treatment with human breathing after crushing plants, the concentration of MeJA and the activity of related genes showed the same tendency to increase. As a result, the plant that responded sensitively to human behavior was Peucedanum japonicum. Plants released MeJA as a chemical word in the treatment with human breathing air after crushing plants.

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Acknowledgement

This study was supported by the research project of the Rural Development Administration (PJ01262403).