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Physiological Basis for the Mechanism of Selectivity of Tripyrasulfone between Rice ( Oryza sativa ) and Barnyard Grass ( Echinochloa crus-galli ).

He SunShuo YuTingjie HuangLei LianTao JinXuegang PengGe-Fei HaoJinxin WangWeitang LiuHengzhi Wang
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2024)
Tripyrasulfone is currently the only HPPD-inhibiting herbicide that possesses outstanding selectivity even for direct-seeded rice ( Oryza sativa ) when applied POST to control grass weeds; however, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, the inhibitory effects of the real active HDT of tripyrasulfone on recombinant 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPDs) from rice and barnyard grass ( Echinochloa crus-galli ) were similar, with consistent structural interactions and similar binding energies predicted by molecular docking. However, the HPPD expression level in rice was significantly greater than that in barnyard grass after tripyrasulfone treatment. Tripyrasulfone was rapidly taken up and hydrolyzed into HDT, which was similarly distributed within the whole plants of rice and barnyard grass at 24 h after treatment. Compared with barnyard grass, rice has more uniform epicuticular wax in the cuticle of its leaves, absorbing less tripyrasulfone and metabolizing much more tripyrasulfone. Overall, to a greater extent, the different sensitivities to tripyrasulfone between barnyard grass and rice resulted from metabolic variations.
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