Full TGIF Record # 24584
Item 1 of 1
Publication Type:
i
Refereed
Author(s):Betts, Kevin J; Ehlke, Nancy J.; Wyse, Donald L.; Gronwald, John W.; Somers, David A.
Author Affiliation:Betts: Senior Scientist; Ehlke: Assistant Professor; Wyse: Professor; Gronwald: Plant Physiologist, Plant Science Research Unit, Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service; and Somers: Associate Professor, Department of Agronomuy and Plant Genetics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota
Title:Mechanism of inheritance of diclofop resistance in Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum)
Source:Weed Science. Vol. 40, No. 2, April-June 1992, p. 184-189.
Publishing Information:Champaign, IL: Weed Science Society of America
# of Pages:6
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Diclofop; Lolium multiflorum; Weed control; Herbicide resistance; Biotypes; Genomes; Breeding; Inheritance
Abstract/Contents:"A diclofop-methyl-resistant biotype of Italian ryegrass was characterized to determine the expression and inheritance of herbicide resistance and whether this trait was due to the presence of a diclofop-insensitive form of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (ACCase). At the whole plant level, the resistant biotype was > 93-fold more resistant to diclofop-methyl than the susceptible biotype. Crosses of diclofop-resistant and -susceptible plants were performed to produce F1 plants. No maternal effects were evident in responses of reciprocal F1 plants to diclofop. GR50 diclofop rates determined for resistant, F1, and susceptible plants were 15, 6.3, and 0.16 kg ha-1, respectively. F2 populations treated with a 7.5 kg ha-1 rate of diclofop exhibited three injury response phenotypes 3 wk after treatment: a susceptible (S) phenotype which was killed, an intermediate resistance (I) phenotype with severe injury, and a resistant (R) phenotype with little or no injury. Testcross progeny exhibited only I and S phenotypes. Observed segregation of phenotypes in F2 and testcross populations conformed to segregation of phenotypes in F2 and testcross populations conformed to segregation ratios predicted for a trait with inheritance controlled by a single partially dominant nuclear gene. ACCase activity determined in crude cell-free extracts of resistant, F1, and susceptible biotypes exhibited I50 values of 50, 20, and 0.7 µm diclofop, respectively. A positive relationship between the injury response phenotype and site of action (ACCase) response to diclofop was evident in both F1 and F2 populations. In extracts from R, I, and S phenotype F2 plants, 20 µM diclofop acid inhibited ACCase-mediated incorporation of 14C by 27.1, 45.1, and 78.9%, respectively. The ACCase data are consistent with the hypothesis that diclofop resistance in Italian ryegrass is conferred by a diclofop-insensitive form of ACCase."
Language:English
References:27
Note:Tables
Graphs
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Betts, K. J., N. J. Ehlke, D. L. Wyse, J. W. Gronwald, and D. A. Somers. 1992. Mechanism of inheritance of diclofop resistance in Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum). Weed Sci. 40(2):p. 184-189.
Fastlink to access this record outside TGIF: https://tic.msu.edu/tgif/flink?recno=24584
If there are problems with this record, send us feedback about record 24584.
Choices for finding the above item:
Find Item @ MSU
MSU catalog number: SB 610 .W38
Request through your local library's inter-library loan service (bring or send a copy of this TGIF record)