The molecular basis of triazine-herbicide resistance in higher-plant chloroplasts

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Abstract

Triazine herbicides inhibit photosynthesis by blocking electron transport in photosystem II. The target site ofthe herbicide was identified as a chloroplast thylakoid polypeptide (the QB protein) of 32,000 daltons. Studies of triazine-resistant weed biotypes suggested that a subtle change in the QB protein caused the resistance. We have cloned the chloroplast gene (psbA) that codes this protein from herbicide-resistant and herbicide-susceptible biotypes of Solanum nigrum. By DN A sequencing we detected a single base substitution in the psbA gene of the resistant plants, resulting in an amino acid change (serine to glycine for the susceptible to resistance conversion). This mutation is exactly the same one which we have described in a herbicide-resistant biotype of Amaranthus hybridus. © 1984, Walter de Gruyter. All rights reserved.

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Hirschber, J., Bleecker, A., Kyle, D. J., McIntosh, L., & Arntzen, C. J. (1984). The molecular basis of triazine-herbicide resistance in higher-plant chloroplasts. Zeitschrift Fur Naturforschung - Section C Journal of Biosciences, 39(5), 412–420. https://doi.org/10.1515/znc-1984-0521

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