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Characterizing the effect of short wavelengths on the floral flavonoid metabolome of medicinal cannabis using a comparative computational metabolomics workflow

Torres Ortega, L. R.; Contreras-Aviles, W.; Heuvelink, E.; Marcelis, L. F. M.; van der Hooft, J. J. J.; Kappers, I. F.

2026-05-01 biochemistry
10.64898/2026.04.28.721290 bioRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundControlled-environment cultivation of medicinal cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.) typically optimizes light conditions to enhance the biosynthesis of pharmaceutically important metabolites like cannabinoids. Such experimental strategies may also influence other specialized metabolites like terpenoids, flavonoids, alkaloids, among others. Previous untargeted metabolomics studies testing short wavelength conditions like UV and blue light have shown that terpenoids and prenylated flavonoids in cannabis leaves respond differentially. However, since metabolomic studies in cannabis have so far mostly focused on floral cannabinoids, a comprehensive untargeted study into cannabis floral metabolome response to short wavelengths is currently lacking. ObjectivesOur study investigates the impact of short wavelength usage on cannabis specialized metabolism, and in particular the influence of UVB, UVA, and blue light on the cannabis floral flavonoid metabolome and associated glycosylation moieties. MethodsCannabis plants were grown under a white background light and exposed to supplemental UVB, UVA, or blue light during the generative phase of the cultivation cycle. Treatments were compared to a reference white background light without UV or blue light. Metabolites from floral tissue were extracted and analyzed via ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. A comparative metabolomics workflow was designed and used to characterize the floral flavonoid metabolome and associated glycosylation moieties. ResultsOur results demonstrate how short wavelengths differentially affect the metabolism of natural product compound classes including polyketides and phenylpropanoids/shikimates. Blue light induced flavonoids similarly to how UVB did, while both UVA and blue light specifically induced flavanones accumulation. UVB showed the strongest regulatory effect on flavonoids production and glycosylation patterns. ConclusionsUVB reshapes the cannabis floral flavonoid metabolome by selectively stimulating the accumulation and structural modification of flavonoids. Therefore, UVB application in cannabis cultivation represents a useful horticultural strategy to increase inflorescence medicinal quality without affecting cannabinoid levels.

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