Glyphosate-resistant horseweed made sensitive to glyphosate: Low-temperature suppression of glyphosate vacuolar sequestration revealed by 31P NMR

Xia Ge, Dana André d'Avignon, Joseph Jh Ackerman, Bill Duncan, Marvin B. Spaur, Robert Douglas Sammons

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

83 Scopus citations

Abstract

Horseweed has been the most invasive glyphosate-resistant (GR) weed, spreading to 16 states in the United States and found on five continents. The authors have previously reported that GR horseweed employs rapid vacuolar sequestration of glyphosate, presumably via a tonoplast transporter, substantively to reduce cytosolic glyphosate concentrations.1 It was hypothesized that glyphosate sequestration was the herbicide resistance mechanism. If resistance is indeed endowed by glyphosate sequestration, suppression of sequestration offers the potential for controlling GR horseweed at normal herbicide field-use rates. RESULTS: Low-temperature 31P NMR experiments performed in vivo with GR cold-acclimated horseweed showed markedly suppressed vacuolar accumulation of glyphosate even 3 days after glyphosate treatment. [In stark contrast, 85% of the visible glyphosate was sequestered 24 h after spraying warm-acclimated GR horseweed.] Cold-acclimated GR horseweed treated at normal use rates and maintained at low temperature succumbed to the lethal effects of glyphosate over a 40 day period. Treatment of GR horseweed in the field when temperatures were cooler showed the predicted positive herbicidal response. CONCLUSIONS: Low temperature markedly diminishes vacuolar sequestration of glyphosate in the GR horseweed biotype, yielding a herbicide response equivalent to that of the sensitive biotype. This supports the recent hypothesis1 that glyphosate sequestration is the resistance mechanism employed by GR horseweed.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1215-1221
Number of pages7
JournalPest management science
Volume67
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ABC transporter
  • Conyza canadensis
  • Glyphosate
  • Glyphosate resistance
  • In vivo P NMR

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Glyphosate-resistant horseweed made sensitive to glyphosate: Low-temperature suppression of glyphosate vacuolar sequestration revealed by 31P NMR'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this