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Tridax Daisy resistance explained

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Manage episode 220697121 series 1313805
Content provided by AHRI Snapshots. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by AHRI Snapshots or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The AHRI research paper: Glyphosate resistance in Tridax procumbens via a novel EPSPS Thr-102-Ser substitution", by Li et al, was published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2018.This paper is a collaborative effort with researchers coming from China to AHRI and with modelling from Alex Nyporko from Kiev, Ukraine. Lead author Dr Jingbo Li from Hunan University and second author Dr Qiong Peng were visiting fellows in AHRI supported by the China Scholarship Council.In this research, it was first established that Tridax, a global tropical weed species, evolved glyphosate resistance in the Ord River irrigation area in north-western Western Australia.This is the first report of glyphosate resistance in Tridax. The mechanism of glyphosate resistance was studied. Various possible resistance mechanisms were NOT responsible for resistance (EPSPS gene amplification, different glyphosate uptake or translocation). In this glyphosate-resistant Tridax population, the glyphosate resistance mechanism is a mutation in the EPSPS gene causing substitution at amino acid 102 (Thr-102-Ser).This is the first time that a single amino acid substitution at Thr 102 has been reported to endow glyphosate resistance. Note that Tridax is a tetraploid and this Thr-102-Ser amino acid substitution, as expected in a tetraploid species, confers only a modest level of glyphosate resistance. This finding of a resistance endowing amino acid substitution at amino acid 102 adds to the many reports of glyphosate resistance due to amino acid substitutions at Proline 106. The 102 site is within the highly conserved and catalytically important EPSPS region.We have previously reported in Eleusine that a double mutation at amino acids 102 and 106, the TIPS mutations, confer high-level glyphosate resistance but at substantial fitness cost (Yu et al Plant Physiology 2015).Dr Heping Han explains the research in the podcast. You can also learn more about this research in AHRI insight: https://ahri.uwa.edu.au/rare-but-predictable-a-new-target-site-mutation-for-glyphosate-resistance-discovered/Authors: Jingbo Li, Qiong Peng, Heping Han, Alex Nyporko, Tymofii Kulynych, Qin Yu, Stephen Powles.

You can follow AHRI on Twitter here. To learn more about AHRI's research and team, check out the website here.

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137 episodes

Artwork
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Manage episode 220697121 series 1313805
Content provided by AHRI Snapshots. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by AHRI Snapshots or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The AHRI research paper: Glyphosate resistance in Tridax procumbens via a novel EPSPS Thr-102-Ser substitution", by Li et al, was published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2018.This paper is a collaborative effort with researchers coming from China to AHRI and with modelling from Alex Nyporko from Kiev, Ukraine. Lead author Dr Jingbo Li from Hunan University and second author Dr Qiong Peng were visiting fellows in AHRI supported by the China Scholarship Council.In this research, it was first established that Tridax, a global tropical weed species, evolved glyphosate resistance in the Ord River irrigation area in north-western Western Australia.This is the first report of glyphosate resistance in Tridax. The mechanism of glyphosate resistance was studied. Various possible resistance mechanisms were NOT responsible for resistance (EPSPS gene amplification, different glyphosate uptake or translocation). In this glyphosate-resistant Tridax population, the glyphosate resistance mechanism is a mutation in the EPSPS gene causing substitution at amino acid 102 (Thr-102-Ser).This is the first time that a single amino acid substitution at Thr 102 has been reported to endow glyphosate resistance. Note that Tridax is a tetraploid and this Thr-102-Ser amino acid substitution, as expected in a tetraploid species, confers only a modest level of glyphosate resistance. This finding of a resistance endowing amino acid substitution at amino acid 102 adds to the many reports of glyphosate resistance due to amino acid substitutions at Proline 106. The 102 site is within the highly conserved and catalytically important EPSPS region.We have previously reported in Eleusine that a double mutation at amino acids 102 and 106, the TIPS mutations, confer high-level glyphosate resistance but at substantial fitness cost (Yu et al Plant Physiology 2015).Dr Heping Han explains the research in the podcast. You can also learn more about this research in AHRI insight: https://ahri.uwa.edu.au/rare-but-predictable-a-new-target-site-mutation-for-glyphosate-resistance-discovered/Authors: Jingbo Li, Qiong Peng, Heping Han, Alex Nyporko, Tymofii Kulynych, Qin Yu, Stephen Powles.

You can follow AHRI on Twitter here. To learn more about AHRI's research and team, check out the website here.

  continue reading

137 episodes

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