Mechanisms of evolved herbicide resistance

被引:452
作者
Gaines, Todd A. [1 ]
Duke, Stephen O. [2 ]
Morran, Sarah [1 ]
Rigon, Carlos A. G. [1 ]
Tranel, Patrick J. [3 ]
Kuepper, Anita [4 ]
Dayan, Franck E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Colorado State Univ, Agr Biol Dept, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[2] Univ Mississippi, Sch Pharm, Natl Ctr Nat Prod Res, Oxford, MS 38677 USA
[3] Univ Illinois, Dept Crop Sci, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[4] Bayer AG, CropSci Div, Frankfurt, Germany
关键词
Cytochrome P450; glutathioneS-transferase; herbicide metabolism; reduced translocation; target-site resistance; nontarget-site resistance; cross-resistance; multiple resistance; plant evolution; selection pressure; plant defense; plant physiology; plant molecular biology; plant biochemistry; mutant; evolution; xenobiotic; herbicide; resistance mechanism; WATERHEMP AMARANTHUS-TUBERCULATUS; CONFERS GLYPHOSATE RESISTANCE; HORSEWEED CONYZA-CANADENSIS; EPSPS GENE AMPLIFICATION; WATERGRASS ECHINOCHLOA-PHYLLOPOGON; RYEGRASS LOLIUM-MULTIFLORUM; ALS-INHIBITING HERBICIDES; AMINO-ACID SUBSTITUTION; TARGET-SITE; ARYL ACYLAMIDASE;
D O I
10.1074/jbc.REV120.013572
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The widely successful use of synthetic herbicides over the past 70 years has imposed strong and widespread selection pressure, leading to the evolution of herbicide resistance in hundreds of weed species. Both target-site resistance (TSR) and nontarget-site resistance (NTSR) mechanisms have evolved to most herbicide classes. TSR often involves mutations in genes encoding the protein targets of herbicides, affecting the binding of the herbicide either at or near catalytic domains or in regions affecting access to them. Most of these mutations are nonsynonymous SNPs, but polymorphisms in more than one codon or entire codon deletions have also evolved. Some herbicides bind multiple proteins, making the evolution of TSR mechanisms more difficult. Increased amounts of protein target, by increased gene expression or by gene duplication, are an important, albeit less common, TSR mechanism. NTSR mechanisms include reduced absorption or translocation and increased sequestration or metabolic degradation. The mechanisms that can contribute to NTSR are complex and often involve genes that are members of large gene families. For example, enzymes involved in herbicide metabolism?based resistances include cytochromes P450, GSHS-transferases, glucosyl and other transferases, aryl acylamidase, and others. Both TSR and NTSR mechanisms can combine at the individual level to produce higher resistance levels. The vast array of herbicide-resistance mechanisms for generalist (NTSR) and specialist (TSR and some NTSR) adaptations that have evolved over a few decades illustrate the evolutionary resilience of weed populations to extreme selection pressures. These evolutionary processes drive herbicide and herbicide-resistant crop development and resistance management strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:10307 / 10330
页数:24
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