Exogenous Methyl Jasmonate Mediates Secondary Metabolic Reprogramming to Enhance Resistance in Tea Plants
Jie Liu, Zaifa Shu, Xinyan Lan, Dayun Zhou, Huiting Yang, Huijuan Zhou, Qingyong Ji, Limin Chen, Weizhong He

TL;DR
This study finds that methyl jasmonate can help tea plants resist pests without harming their quality.
Contribution
The study identifies an optimal MeJA concentration range for pest resistance and growth in tea plants.
Findings
Appropriate MeJA concentrations (0.2–2 mM) improved tea plant growth traits.
MeJA treatments did not affect quality-related biochemical components.
MeJA offers a practical solution for pest resistance in tea plantations.
Abstract
Tea plants are frequently threatened by insect pests, resulting in substantial yield and quality losses. Methyl jasmonate (MeJA) is a key defense signaling molecule in plants; however, its integrated effects on tea plant growth, resistance, and quality-related traits remain poorly understood. In this study, field experiments were conducted to evaluate the effects of exogenous MeJA at different concentration (0.02–20 mM) on growth traits, quality components, and resistance to the tea green leafhopper and tea orange gall mite in Camellia sinensis ‘Zhongcha 108’, and transcriptome analysis was further integrated to elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms. The results showed that appropriate MeJA concentrations (0.2–2 mM) significantly optimized bud morphology, characterized by shortened internodes, thicker stems, and reduced leaf insertion angles. Importantly, these treatments did…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect-Plant Interactions and Control · Hemiptera Insect Studies · Plant biochemistry and biosynthesis
