Production of secreted leaf bud resin is a mechanism for temperate trees to protect dormant leaf buds against frost damage, dehydration, and insect herbivory. Bud resins contain a wide variety of special metabolites including terpenoids, benzenoids, and phenolics. The leaf bud resins of Populus trichocarpa and P. balsamifera contain high concentrations of O-methylated dihydrochalcones, but the enzymes for methylating these compounds remain enigmatic. We used transcriptomics and differential gene expression analyses to identify a gene encoding a P. trichocarpa DHC-specific O-methyltransferase, which we named PtDOMT1. Detailed enzymatic analyses demonstrated PtDOMT1 to be a highly selective and regiospecific O-methyltransferase which methylates 4- and 4'-positions of dihydrochalcones using S-adenosyl-L-methionine as a methyl donor. PtDOMT1 did not methylate any other flavonoid or phenolic substrate tested. These findings establish the final step in the biosynthesis of O-methylated dihydrochalcones in poplar and represent the first molecular analysis of leaf bud resin biosynthesis in plants.
Keywords: O-methyltransferase; Phenylpropanoid; dihydrochalcone; flavonoid; plant defense; poplar; resin.
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology.