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A Double Mutation in the ALS Gene Confers a High Level of Resistance to Mesosulfuron-Methyl in Shepherd's-Purse.

Huan LuYingze LiuDexiao BuFan YangZheng ZhangSheng Qiang
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Shepherd's-purse ( Capsella bursa-pastoris ), a globally distributed noxious weed species often found in wheat, has evolved resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides mainly due to single mutations in the ALS gene. In the present study, dose-response bioassays showed that a shepherd's-purse population (R), collected from Xinghua, Jiangsu Province, China, had high level of resistance to the ALS-inhibiting herbicide, mesosulfuron-methyl (800-fold), and even much higher resistance levels to other reported ALS-inhibiting herbicides, tribenuron-methyl (1313-fold), bensulfuron-methyl (969-fold) and penoxsulam (613-fold). Sequencing of the open reading frame of the ALS gene revealed a double ALS gene mutation (Pro197-Ser plus Trp574-Leu) conferring the high resistance in the R plants. Docking analysis of the ALS protein and mesosulfuron-methyl predicts that the two amino acid substitutions in the R samples reduces the binding energy to the herbicide by decreasing the hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) and other interactions, thus endowing resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides. These results demonstrate that the double ALS mutation confers high resistance levels to ALS-inhibiting herbicides. To our knowledge, this is the first evidence of the double ALS mutation in shepherd's-purse endowing ALS-inhibiting herbicide resistance.
Keyphrases
  • amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
  • signaling pathway
  • healthcare
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • small molecule
  • working memory
  • genome wide identification
  • genetic diversity