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Interspecific hybridization transfers a previously unknown glyphosate resistance mechanism in Amaranthus species.

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TLDR
A previously unknown glyphosate resistance mechanism, amplification of the 5‐enolpyruvyl shikimate‐3‐phosphate synthase gene, was recently reported in Amaranthus palmeri, representing an avenue for acquisition of a novel adaptive trait.
Abstract
A previously unknown glyphosate resistance mechanism, amplification of the 5-enolpyruvyl shikimate-3-phosphate synthase gene, was recently reported in Amaranthus palmeri. This evolved mechanism could introgress to other weedy Amaranthus species through interspecific hybridization, representing an avenue for acquisition of a novel adaptive trait. The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential for this glyphosate resistance trait to transfer via pollen from A. palmeri to five other weedy Amaranthus species (Amaranthus hybridus, Amaranthus powellii, Amaranthus retroflexus, Amaranthus spinosus, and Amaranthus tuberculatus). Field and greenhouse crosses were conducted using glyphosate-resistant male A. palmeri as pollen donors and the other Amaranthus species as pollen recipients. Hybridization between A. palmeri and A. spinosus occurred with frequencies in the field studies ranging from <0.01% to 0.4%, and 1.4% in greenhouse crosses. A majority of the A. spinosus × A. palmeri hybrids grown to flowering were monoecious and produced viable seed. Hybridization occurred in the field study between A. palmeri and A. tuberculatus (<0.2%), and between A. palmeri and A. hybridus (<0.01%). This is the first documentation of hybridization between A. palmeri and both A. spinosus and A. hybridus.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Glyphosate resistance: state of knowledge.

TL;DR: A model based on finite glyphosate dose and limiting time required for chloroplast loading sets the stage for understanding how uniquely different mechanisms can contribute to overall glyphosate resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolutionary origins of pesticide resistance.

TL;DR: Pesticide resistance provides an interesting case of rapid evolution under strong selective pressures, which can be used to address fundamental questions concerning the evolutionary origins of adaptations to novel conditions, and lessons learnt from pesticide resistance should be applied in the deployment of novel, non‐chemical pest‐control methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of evolved herbicide resistance

TL;DR: The vast array of herbicide-resistance mechanisms for generalist (NTSR) and specialist (TSR and some NTSR) adaptations that have evolved over a few decades illustrate the evolutionary resilience of weed populations to extreme selection pressures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Palmer Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri): A Review

TL;DR: The growing body of literature on Palmer amaranth is reviewed to summarize the current state of knowledge on the biology, agricultural impacts, and management of this weed, and future directions for research are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glyphosate Resistance in Tall Waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus) from Mississippi is due to both Altered Target-Site and Nontarget-Site Mechanisms

TL;DR: Sequence analysis of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS) from GR and GS plants identified a consistent single nucleotide polymorphism (T/C, thymine/cytosine) between GR/GS plants, resulting in a proline to serine amino acid substitution at position 106 in the GR population.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: A method is presented for the rapid isolation of high molecular weight plant DNA which is free of contaminants which interfere with complete digestion by restriction endonucleases, and which yields total cellular DNA.
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The role of hybridization in evolution

TL;DR: Fisher’s model of stabilizing selection on multiple traits, under which reproductive isolation evolves as a side‐effect of adaptation in allopatry, confirms a priori arguments that while recombinant hybrids are less fit on average, some gene combinations may be fitter than the parents, even in the parental environment.
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Evolution in Action: Plants Resistant to Herbicides

TL;DR: Understanding resistance and building sustainable solutions to herbicide resistance evolution are necessary and worthy challenges to herbicides sustainability in world agriculture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gene Flow and Introgression from Domesticated Plants into Their Wild Relatives

TL;DR: A literature review of the world's most important food crops shows that 12 of these crops hybridize with wild relatives in some part of their agricultural distribution, and suggests ways of assessing the likelihood of hybridization, introgression, and the potential for undesirable gene flow from crops into weeds or rare species.
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