| Literature DB >> 35032953 |
Lang Pan1, Qiushuang Guo1, Junzhi Wang1, Li Shi1, Xiao Yang2, Yaoyu Zhou3, Qin Yu4, Lianyang Bai5.
Abstract
Long-term and excessive herbicide use has led to some environmental concerns and especially, herbicide resistance evolution in weeds. Here, we confirmed acetolactate synthase (ALS) inhibiting herbicide penoxsulam resistance and cross resistance to acetyl-coenzyme carboxylase (ACCase) inhibiting herbicides (cyhalofop-butyl and metamifop) in a global weed Echinochloa crus-galli population resistant to these herbicides (R). Penoxsulam metabolism study indicated that degradation rate was significantly higher in R than susceptible E. crus-galli population (S). RNA-sequencing revealed that a cytochrome P450 (P450) gene, CYP81A68, expressed higher in R versus S. Rice seedlings overexpressing this CYP81A68 gene are resistant to penoxsulam, cyhalofop-butyl and metamifop, and penoxsulam resistance is due to enhanced metabolism via O-demethylation. Deletion analysis of the CYP81A68 gene promoter identified an efficient region, in which differential methylation of CpG islands occurred between R and S. Collectively, these results demonstrate that upregulation of E. crus-galli CYP81A68 gene endows generalist metabolic resistance to commonly used ALS- and ACCase-inhibiting herbicides in rice fields and epigenetic regulation may play a role in the resistance evolution. This research could contribute to strategies reducing herbicide environmental impacts by judicious selection of alternative herbicide and non-chemical control tactics.Entities:
Keywords: Cyhalofop butyl; Cytochrome P450s; Herbicide metabolism; Metamifop; Methylation analysis; O-demethylation; Penoxsulam
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35032953 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.128225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588