Triazolopyrimidine sulfanilides are a class of highly active herbicides whose primary target is acetolactate synthase. Spontaneous mutants of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) (KS-43) and cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) (PS-3 and DO-2) resistant to triazolopyrimidine sulfonanilide were selected in tissue culture. Acetolactate synthase partially purified from the three mutants were 80- to 1000-fold less sensitive to inhibition by the compound compared with the corresponding wild-type enzyme. The mutants also varied in the cross-resistance pattern to other acetolactate synthase inhibiting herbicides in the sulfonylurea, imidazolinone, and pyrimidyl-oxy-benzoate chemical families. Thus, acetolactate synthase from KS-43, PS-3, and DO-2 cultures have different mutations. The affinities for pyruvate, thiamine pyrophosphate, as well as the activity of the mutant enzymes were found to be comparable to the corresponding wild-type enzymes. However, the enzyme from PS-3 was highly resistant to feedback inhibition by valine and leucine. In contrast, acetolactate synthase from KS-43 and DO-2 were inhibited by valine and leucine to nearly the same extent as the wild-type enzymes. Also, PS-3 cultures accumulated much higher levels of the branched chain amino acids compared to the wild-type cotton culture. The mutation in the PS-3 enzyme has therefore rendered it insensitive to feedback regulation by valine and leucine.
CITATION STYLE
Subramanian, M. V., Hung, H. Y., Dias, J. M., Miner, V. W., Butler, J. H., & Jachetta, J. J. (1990). Properties of mutant acetolactate synthases resistant to triazolopyrimidine sulfonanilide. Plant Physiology, 94(1), 239–244. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.94.1.239
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