| Literature DB >> 35214801 |
Vanessa Vital Silva1, Rafael Mendes1, Andreia Suzukawa2, Fernando Adegas3, Francismar Marcelino-Guimaraes3, Rubem Oliveira1.
Abstract
Cases of weed resistant to herbicides have changed the dynamics of agricultural areas in Brazil, and in recent years, Erigeron species have caused major problems to farmers in the country, mainly in relation to the ineffectiveness of herbicide treatments used. The objective of this study was to confirm the cross-resistance to ALS inhibitors in populations of Erigeron sumatrensis as well as to investigate the existence of mutations in the site of action of ALS-inhibiting herbicides. To do this, 30 populations collected in the 2016/2017 crop season were grown in a greenhouse. Dose-response (chlorimuron-ethyl and cloransulam-methyl), inhibition of cytochrome P-450 with malathion, and ALS gene sequencing experiments were carried out in the F1 generations of two fleabane populations. The results proved the cross-resistance to chlorimuron-ethyl and cloransulam-methyl herbicides applied in the post-emergence of the resistant population of E. sumatrensis. The higher activity of P450 enzymes is unlikely responsible for the resistance of the population studied. The resistance mechanism found in R was the target site mutation Pro197Ser at the ALS gene. This is the first study in Brazil to identify a target-site change as a survival mechanism in E. sumatrensis for the resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides.Entities:
Keywords: Sumatran fleabane; acetolactate synthase; imidazolinones; resistance factor; sulfonylureas; triazolopyrimidines
Year: 2022 PMID: 35214801 PMCID: PMC8879965 DOI: 10.3390/plants11040467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Dispersion of populations of Sumatran fleabane (Erigeron sumatrensis) resistant to ALS inhibitors, chlorimuron-ethyl, and cloransulam-methyl in Paraná state (PR), Brazil. Red: cross-resistance to ALS inhibitors; orange: resistant to chlorimuron-ethyl; yellow: resistant to cloransulam-methyl; green: susceptible.
Figure 2Dose-response curves for chlorimuron-ethyl (A,B) and cloransulam-methyl (C,D) in populations resistant (R) and susceptible (S) to ALS inhibitors (Erigeron sumatrensis).
Percentages of injury at 28 days after application (DAA) of two Erigeron sumatrensis populations after the application of ALS-inhibiting herbicides in Pre- and Post-emergence.
| Herbicide (Dose in g ha−1) | Pre-Emergence Injury (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R | S | |||
| Non-treated | 0 | c | 0 | b |
| Diclosulam (25.2) | 65 | a | 100 | a |
| Chlorimuron-ethyl (20) | 31.2 | b | 100 | a |
| Metsulfuron-methyl (2) | 71.2 | a | 99 | a |
| Imazethapyr (106) | 38.7 | b | 100 | a |
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| Non-treated | 0 | e | 0 | e |
| Cloransulam-methyl (33.6) | 61.2 | bc | 99.5 | a |
| Chlorimuron-ethyl (20) | 66.2 | ab | 95.5 | a |
| Metsulfuron-methyl (2) | 51.2 | d | 98.2 | a |
| Trifloxysulfuron-sodium (7.5) | 65 | b | 90 | ab |
| Imazethapyr (106) | 52.5 | cd | 68.7 | c |
| Imazapic (98) | 75 | a | 83.7 | b |
| Pyrithiobac-sodium (36) | 5 | e | 51.2 | d |
Means followed by the same lower-case letter in each experiment and in the same column do not differ by the Student’s t-test at a 5% probability. Pre-emergence coefficient of variation percentage (CV %) = 24.52; Post-emergence CV (%) = 11.51.
Percentages of injury and dry masses at 28 DAA of two Erigeron sumatrensis populations after the application of ALS-inhibiting herbicides with or without the application of malathion.
| Herbicide (Dose in g ha−1) | R | S | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injury (%) | Dry Mass * | Injury (%) | Dry Mass * | |||||
| Non-treated | 0 | f | 100 | a | 0 | c | 100 | a |
| Malathion (1000) | 0 | f | 84.5 | b | 0 | c | 108.5 | a |
| Cloransulam-methyl (33.6) | 22.5 | e | 73.8 | bc | 99.5 | a | 0 | c |
| Cloransulam-methyl (33.6) + | 37.5 | d | 58.8 | cd | 99.5 | a | 0 | c |
| Chlorimuron-ethyl (20) | 47.5 | bc | 69.9 | bc | 99.5 | a | 0 | c |
| Chlorimuron-ethyl (20) + | 42.5 | cd | 60.1 | c | 98.2 | a | 0 | c |
| Imazethapyr (106) | 48.7 | b | 53.4 | de | 62.5 | b | 41.8 | b |
| Imazethapyr (106)+ | 56.2 | a | 42.3 | e | 61.2 | b | 33.9 | b |
+ with the application of malathion (1000 g ha–1) one hour before herbicide treatment; * % untreated. Means followed by the same lower-case letter in the column do not differ by the Student’s t-test at a 5% probability. Injury R population CV (%) = 13.39; dry mass R population CV (%) = 15.65; injury S population CV (%) = 2.62; dry mass S population CV (%) = 23.69.
Figure 3Nucleotide sequence of the ALS gene of Erigeron sumatrensis resistant (R) and susceptible (S) to ALS inhibitors. (A) Substitution of Ser for Pro in position 197. Letter Y represents base T or C. (B) Chromatogram demonstrating the heterozygosity found in the substitution of alleles containing CCC (plants S) and TCC or CCC plants R.
Identification of populations and sampling sites for Erigeron sumatrensis seeds in Maringá, PR, 2017.
| Population Code | City | State | Geographical Coordinates | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latitude | Longitude | |||
| 1 | Engenheiro Beltrão | PR | 23°50′23″ S | 52°22′49″ W |
| 2 | Campina da Lagoa | PR | 24°55′17″ S | 53°21′35″ W |
| 3 | Medianeira | PR | 25°17′22″ S | 54°02′50″ W |
| 4 | Campo Bonito | PR | 25°02′02″ S | 54°01′42″ W |
| 5 | Quedas do Iguaçu | PR | 25°25′48″ S | 52°56′15″ W |
| 6 | Peabiru | PR | 23°56′31″ S | 52°20′43″ W |
| 7 | Campo Mourão | PR | 23°53′35″ S | 52°21′38″ W |
| 8 | Juranda | PR | 24°21′07″ S | 52°53′38″ W |
| 9 | Palotina | PR | 24°17′26″ S | 53°41′12″ W |
| 10 | Corbélia | PR | 24°51′32″ S | 53°19′4″ W |
| 11 | Cascavel | PR | 23°53′59″ S | 53°28′9″ W |
| 12 | Floresta | PR | 23°36′14″ S | 52°3′21″ W |
| 13 | Maringá | PR | 23°19′26″ S | 51°57′6″ W |
| 14 | Bandeirantes | PR | 123°5′16″ S | 50°26′20″ W |
| 15 | São Jorge do Ivaí | PR | 23°29′57″ S | 52°19′14″ W |
| 16 | Goioerê | PR | 24°05′23″ S | 53°07′01″ W |
| 17 | Maripá | PR | 24°30′25″ S | 53°43′12” W |
| 18 | Toledo | PR | 24°24′14″ S | 53°51′29” W |
| 19 | Londrina | PR | 23°10′56″ S | 51°10′57” W |
| 20 | Cambé | PR | 23°13′52″ S | 51°14′47″ W |
| 21 | Nova Aurora | PR | 24°23′51″ S | 53°21′55” W |
| 22 | Assis Chateaubriand | PR | 24°17′34″ S | 53°33′56″ W |
| 23 | Ventania | PR | 24°22′18″ S | 50°9′42″ W |
| 24 | Piraí do Sul | PR | 24°32′28″ S | 49°59′56″ W |
| 25 | Ivaiporã | PR | 24°24′2″ S | 51°47′23″ W |
| 26 | Pitanga | PR | 24°43′22″ S | 51°45′57″ W |
| 27 | Tibagi | PR | 24°33′24″ S | 50°23′37″ W |
| 28 | Castro | PR | 24°36′4″ S | 49°42′58″ W |
| 29 | Guarapuava | PR | 25°24′42″ S | 51°39′52″ W |
| 30 | Roncador | PR | 24°32′49″ S | 52°23′29″ W |
Herbicides, label doses used in Brazil (g a.i. or a.e. ha−1), and application modality for cross-resistance experiments.
| Treatments Exp 1 | Chemical Group | Treatments Exp 2 | Chemical Group |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-treated | - | Non treated | - |
| Diclosulam (25.2) | TRI | Cloransulam-methyl 1/ (33.6) | TRI |
| Chlorimuron-ethyl (20) | SUL | Chlorimuron-ethyl 2/ (20) | SUL |
| Metsulfuron-methyl (2) | SUL | Metsulfuron-methyl 2/ (2) | SUL |
| Imazethapyr (106) | IMI | Trifloxysulfuron-sodium (7.5) | SUL |
| Imazethapyr (106) | IMI | ||
| Imazapic (98) | IMI | ||
| Pyrithiobac-sodium (36) | PYR |
SUL, sulfonylureas; IMI, imidazolinones; TRI, triazolopyrimidines; PYR, pyrimidinyl thiobenzoates. 1/ Applied with a non-ionic surfactant (0.2% v v−1); 2/ applied with mineral oil (0.5% v v−1).