4.7 Article

Cyhalofop-butyl and Glyphosate Multiple-Herbicide Resistance Evolved in an Eleusine indica Population Collected in Chinese Direct-Seeding Rice

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 68, Issue 9, Pages 2623-2630

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b07342

Keywords

multiple-herbicide resistance; Eleusine indica; cyhalofop-butyl; glyphosate; alternative herbicides

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of the Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions of China [19KJB210005]

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Eleusine indica is a typical xerophytic weed species with a cosmopolitan distribution. It is invasive and highly adaptable to diverse habitats and crops. Due to rice cropping-pattern changes, E indica has become one of the main dominant grass weeds infecting direct-seeding paddy fields. A Chinese E. indica population has evolved multiple-herbicide resistance to cyhalofop-butyl and glyphosate. In this study, the multiple-resistance profile of E. indica to these two different types of herbicides and their resistance mechanisms were investigated. Whole-plant dose-response assays indicated that the multiple-herbicide-resistant (MHR) population exhibited 10.8-fold resistance to cyhalofop-butyl and 3.1-fold resistance to glyphosate compared with the susceptible (S) population. ACCase sequencing revealed that the Asp-2078-Gly mutation was strongly associated with E. indica resistance to cyhalofop-butyl. The MHR plants accumulated less shikimic acid than S plants at 4, 6, and 8 days after glyphosate treatment. In addition, no amino acid substitution in the EPSPS gene was found in MHR plants. Further analysis revealed that the relative expression level of EPSPS in MHR plants was 6-10-fold higher than that in S plants following glyphosate treatment, indicating that EPSPS overexpression may contribute to the glyphosate resistance. Furthermore, the effectiveness of nine post-emergence herbicides against E. indica were evaluated, and one PPO inhibitor pyraclonil was identified as highly effective in controlling the S and MHR E. indica populations.

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