This manuscript describes how herbicide metabolism rates can be effectively quantified with excised leaves from a dicot weed, thereby reducing variability and removing any possible confounding effects of herbicide uptake or translocation typically observed in whole-plant assays.
In order to isolate and accurately determine rates of herbicide metabolism in an obligate-outcrossing dicot weed, waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus), we developed an excised leaf assay combined with a vegetative cloning strategy to normalize herbicide uptake and remove translocation as contributing factors in herbicide-resistant (R) and –sensitive (S) waterhemp populations. Biokinetic analyses of organic pesticides in plants typically include the determination of uptake, translocation (delivery to the target site), metabolic fate, and interactions with the target site. Herbicide metabolism is an important parameter to measure in herbicide-resistant weeds and herbicide-tolerant crops, and is typically accomplished with whole-plant tests using radiolabeled herbicides. However, one difficulty with interpreting biokinetic parameters derived from whole-plant methods is that translocation is often affected by rates of herbicide metabolism, since polar metabolites are usually not mobile within the plant following herbicide detoxification reactions. Advantages of the protocol described in this manuscript include reproducible, accurate, and rapid determination of herbicide degradation rates in R and S populations, a substantial decrease in the amount of radiolabeled herbicide consumed, a large reduction in radiolabeled plant materials requiring further handling and disposal, and the ability to perform radiolabeled herbicide experiments in the lab or growth chamber instead of a greenhouse. As herbicide resistance continues to develop and spread in dicot weed populations worldwide, the excised leaf assay method developed and described herein will provide an invaluable technique for investigating non-target site-based resistance due to enhanced rates of herbicide metabolism and detoxification.
Herbicide resistance in weeds presents a serious threat to the global production of food and fiber1,2. Currently, thousands of resistant populations and biotypes from over a hundred weed species worldwide have been documented and studied3. A major mechanism that confers herbicide resistance in plants is the alteration of herbicide target-site genes and proteins, including genetic mutations that affect herbicide-protein binding kinetics or amplification of the target-site gene2. Metabolic detoxification via elevated activities of cytochrome P450 monooxygenase(P450) or glutathione S-transferase (GST) enzymes is another mechanism that confers herbicide resistance in weeds, which is distinct in several ways from target-site-based mechanisms2. Metabolic-based resistance has significant ramifications for whether plant fitness costs (a.k.a. fitness penalties) may result from the herbicide-resistance mechanism, as well as regarding the potential for a single detoxification mechanism to confer cross- or multiple-herbicide resistance in weed populations1,2,4. Generally, herbicide metabolism in plants can be divided into three distinct phases5. Phase I involves herbicide conversion or activation such as P450-mediated hydroxylation of aromatic rings or alkyl groups, or by N– or O-dealkylation reactions, leading to increased polarity and partial herbicide detoxification5,6. Newly introduced functional groups in Phase I can provide linkage sites for conjugation to reduced glutathione by GSTs or to glucose by UDP-dependent glycosyltransferases in Phase II5,7. For example, the major initial metabolite of primisulfuron-methyl in maize is hydroxy-primisulfuron-methyl8, which can be further metabolized to hydroxy-primisulfuron-glucoside (Phase II) and then transported to the vacuole for long-term storage or further metabolic processing5,6 (Phase III).
Waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus) is a difficult-to-control, dicot annual weed species that hinders the production of maize (Zea mays), soybean (Glycine max), and cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) in the United States. The high degree of genetic diversity of waterhemp is facilitated by its dioecious biology and long-distance wind pollination, and a single female waterhemp plant can produce up to a million seeds9. These seeds are small and easily spread, which naturally endow waterhemp with an effective dispersal mechanism. Waterhemp displays continuous germination throughout the growing season9, and its seeds are able to germinate after several years of dormancy. Waterhemp is a C4 plant that possesses a higher growth rate than most broadleaf weeds in arable cropping systems10. In addition, numerous waterhemp populations are resistant to multiple families of herbicides3.
A population of waterhemp (designated MCR) from Illinois is resistant to 4-hydroxy-phenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD)-inhibiting herbicides11, such as mesotrione, as well as to atrazine and acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides, including primisulfuron-methyl, due to non-target-site based mechanisms12,13. A different population of waterhemp designated ACR14, which is primisulfuron-methyl-resistant (due to a mutation in the ALS gene) and atrazine-resistant but sensitive to mesotrione, and a waterhemp population designated WCS14 that is sensitive to primisulfuron-methyl, mesotrione, and atrazine were used in comparison with MCR in our prior research12 and current experiments (summarized in Table 1). Initial studies did not detect alterations in the HPPD gene sequence or expression levels, or reduced mesotrione uptake, in the MCR population when compared with mesotrione-sensitive populations12. However, metabolism studies with whole plants demonstrated significantly lower levels of parent mesotrione herbicide in MCR compared with ACR and WCS, which correlated with previous phenotypic responses to mesotrione11,12.
Waterhemp Population | Abbreviation | Phenotype to Mesotrione | Mesotrione Resistance Mechanism | Phenotype to Primisulfuron | Primisulfuron Resistance Mechanism |
McLean County-Resistant | MCR | Resistant | Metabolism* | Resistant | Metabolizma |
Adams County-Resistant | ACR | Sensitive | – | Resistant | Target-site mutation in ALS14 |
Wayne County-Sensitive | WCS | Sensitive | – | Sensitive | – |
* Non-target-site resistance mechanisms, other than enhanced metabolism, may also confer mesotrione resistance in the MCR population12.
Table 1: Description of waterhemp populations from Illinois used in this study.
In addition to determining rates of herbicide metabolism in intact waterhemp seedlings, a different experimental approach was developed and employed in our previous research to investigate metabolism by using an excised waterhemp leaf assay12 as well as various P450 inhibitors (e.g., tetcyclacis and malathion). This method was adapted specifically for waterhemp from a previous investigation of primisulfuron-methyl metabolism in excised maize leaves15, since the excised leaf assay had not yet been reported for conducting herbicide metabolism research in a dicot plant. The organophophosate insecticide malathion has been frequently used for in vivo and in vitro herbicide-metabolism research to indicate P450 involvement16. For example, tolerance and rapid metabolism of mesotrione in maize are due to P450-catalyzed ring hydroxylation, which was verified when malathion increased maize sensitivity to mesotrione17. Similarly, malathion inhibited metabolism of the ALS inhibitor primisulfuron-methyl in excised maize leaves15. A major advantage of the excised leaf technique is that data generated are independent of whole-plant translocation patterns, an important factor to consider when assessing metabolism of systemic, postemergence herbicides in plants. Consequently, this method allows quantitative and qualitative metabolic analyses to focus on a single treated leaf12.
A vegetative cloning strategy, in combination with the excised leaf protocol, was previously utilized in waterhemp to conduct metabolism studies12. Due to the outcrossing nature of waterhemp (separate male and female plants), and large degree of genetic diversity within dioecious Amaranthus species9, this protocol ensured that genetically-identical waterhemp seedlings were analyzed within the time-course experiments. This article demonstrates the utility of the excised leaf method for measuring rates of herbicide metabolism in a dicot weed (waterhemp). The quantity of parent herbicide remaining was determined at each time point (Figure 1) by non-linear least squares regression analysis, and was fit with a simple first-order curve in order to estimate the time for 50% of absorbed herbicide to degrade (DT50). Representative chromatograms from reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) are displayed for ALS-resistant and -sensitive waterhemp populations, which indicate the disappearance of parent herbicide and concomitant formation of polar metabolite(s) during a time-course study (Figure 2). The focus of our article is to describe and demonstrate the utility of the excised leaf assay in combination with a vegetative cloning method for determining precise and reproducible rates of herbicide metabolism in dicot plants, using uniformly ring-labeled (URL-14C) herbicides in three waterhemp populations that differ in their whole-plant responses to HPPD- and ALS-inhibiting herbicides (Table 1).
1. Plant Material, Growth Conditions, and Vegetative Cloning
Note: Three waterhemp populations were investigated in this research: MCR (from McLean County, IL), ACR (from Adams County, IL), and WCS (from Wayne County, IL) ( Table 1).
2. Conducting a Metabolism Study with Excised Waterhemp Leaves
3. HPLC Analysis of Herbicide Metabolism in Excised Leaves
Note: Resolve total extractable radioactivity into parent herbicide and herbicide metabolites using the following RP-HPLC conditions12.
4. Statistical Procedures
Large differences in rates of mesotrione metabolism were detected between either WCS or ACR and MCR (Figure 1). At each time point, MCR had metabolized mesotrione more rapidly than the two mesotrione-sensitive populations, WCS and ACR, which correlates with previous whole-plant phenotypic responses11. By cloning enough plants from a single parental plant from each population, herbicide metabolism time-course analyses are uniform and reproducible due to the lack of genetic variability within each time course12. For example, the time course for mesotrione metabolism in clonal line 512 is displayed in Figure 1. A total of six different clonal lines, derived from six individual parent plants, were analyzed from each population (Table 1) to determine an overall median DT50 value, which indicated that mesotrione metabolism in MCR was significantly faster (i.e., had a shorter DT50 value) than ACR or WCS12. Additionally, our previous study with excised leaves showed that P450 inhibitors significantly decreased mesotrione metabolism in MCR and maize, but not in ACR, and the major initial metabolite detected in MCR was identified as 4-hydroxy-mesotrione, indicating that enhanced rates of P450-mediated metabolism are associated with resistance in MCR12.
In addition to studying the mechanisms for mesotrione resistance in MCR, a related objective was to determine the mechanism for resistance to ALS inhibitors in MCR. Prior research demonstrated that a sub-population derived from MCR was ALS resistant but did not possess a mutation in the ALS target site gene, indicating a non-target-site based mechanism13. This is in contrast with ACR, which is ALS resistant due to a target site mutation that confers a less-sensitive ALS enzyme14. In order to test this hypothesis, the excised leaf assay was conducted with [URL-14C] primisulfuron-methyl, an ALS-inhibiting herbicide of the sulfonylurea family. The peak area of 14C-primisulfuron-methyl in a representative HPLC chromatogram (retention time of about 21.6 min) was significantly smaller in MCR than in ACR and WCS at 12 HAT (Figure 2). Additionally, two polar metabolites with shorter retention times than primisulfuron-methyl were detected in excised leaf extracts from all three populations (Figure 2). Although the structures of these two polar metabolites were not determined in this study, their rapid formation is consistent with ring hydroxylation of primisulfuron-methyl8 (Phase I metabolism) followed by glucose conjugation5 (Phase II metabolism).
In combination with the qualitative analyses of primisulfuron metabolism in MCR, ACR, and WCS (Figure 2), the amount of parent herbicide remaining at each time point was quantified and used to determine the DT50 values for primisulfuron-methyl in MCR (13.6 hr), ACR (>24 hr), and WCS (>24 hr) (Figure 3). The significantly shorter DT50 value in MCR is consistent with increased metabolism as the major mechanism for ALS resistance in this population, in accord with previous whole-plant research13. Interestingly, however, the DT50 values for primisulfuron in ACR and WCS are similar yet significantly longer than in MCR (Figure 3), despite both MCR and ACR displaying ALS-inhibitor resistant phenotypes (Table 1). The relatively long DT50 in ACR is possibly because it is not necessary to rapidly metabolize primisulfuron, since ACR has a less-sensitive ALS enzyme as its main resistance mechanism14. In summary, the excised waterhemp leaf assay utilized in our research yielded valuable qualitative and quantitative data and provided new insight into metabolism-based resistance mechanisms towards two different herbicides in MCR, ACR, and WCS.
Figure 1: Time course of mesotrione metabolism in excised waterhemp leaves from vegetatively cloned populations. Excised leaves (third-youngest leaf; 2 to 3 cm in length) from waterhemp seedlings (10 to 12 cm) were vegetatively cloned so that each time-course study for each line consisted of genetically-identical plants. Excised leaves were placed in 0.1 M Tris-HCl buffer (pH 6) for 1 hr, followed by 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 6) plus 150 µM radiolabeled mesotrione for 1 hr (‘pulse’), then quarter-strength Murashige and Skoog (MS) salts solution (‘chase’) for 0 hr, 5 hr, 11 hr, 23 hr, and 35 hr to allow metabolism to occur. Data were analyzed by non-linear least squares regression analysis and fit with a simple first-order curve to estimate a DT50 separately for each cloned waterhemp population12.The MCR clonal line rapidly metabolized mesotrione, while the ACR and WCS clonal lines metabolized mesotrione more slowly. Data shown are time courses from only clonal line 5 for each waterhemp population, which has been modified from our previous paper12 (Copyright by the American Society of Plant Biologists).
Figure 2: Primisulfuron-methyl metabolism in MCR, ACR, and WCS (12 HAT). Representative reversed-phase HPLC chromatograms for excised waterhemp leaf extracts (12 HAT) supplied with 150 µM radiolabeled primisulfuron-methyl (as described in the Protocol) from McLean County (MCR, A), Adams County (ACR, B), and Wayne County herbicide-sensitive (WCS, C) populations (Table 1). Radioactive peak with a retention time of 21.6 min contains primisulfuron-methyl, as determined by comparison with an authentic analytical standard. Peaks with shorter retention times are likely polar, less phytotoxic metabolites of primisulfuron-methyl, such as hydroxy-primisulfuron-methyl8 or glycosylated forms of hydroxylated metabolites5,6. The MCR population displayed a significant decrease in the amount of parent primisulfuron-methyl relative to ACR and WCS, which is quantified as a lower DT50 for MCR (Figure 3).
Figure 3: Time course of primisulfuron-methyl metabolism in excised waterhemp leaves. Excised waterhemp leaves (third-youngest leaf; 2 to 3 cm) were treated as described in Figure 1 and our previous research with mesotrione12, except that 150 µM radiolabeled primisulfuron was included as the ‘pulse’ and leaves were incubated in the MS salts solution (‘chase’) for 0 hr, 3 hr, and 11 hr. Data were analyzed by non-linear least squares regression analysis as described previously for mesotrione metabolism (Figure 1)12. The MCR population rapidly metabolized primisulfuron-methyl (DT50 = 13.6 hr), while ACR and WCS metabolized primisulfuron-methyl more slowly (DT50 >24 hr).
The excised-leaf method described herein has been used previously in researching primisulfuron metabolism in maize leaves15, but our results demonstrate that this protocol is also effective, accurate, and reproducible for measuring herbicide metabolism in a dicot weed species12. A major advantage of the excised leaf technique compared with whole-plant studies is that an excised leaf is independent of whole-plant translocation patterns of postemergence, systemic herbicides or differences in herbicide uptake among plants or populations. In addition, environmental variability is reduced since the excised leaf assays are conducted in a growth chamber, with a single leaf placed in a tube, compared with studying whole plants grown under greenhouse conditions. A vegetative cloning strategy was also included in our method for studying mesotrione-resistance mechanisms in MCR12 to minimize the large degree of genetic variance within and between Amaranthus populations9. Genetic diversity within weedy Amaranthus populations is illustrated by the amount of variability documented in whole-plant responses to several families of postemergence herbicides18. When conducting time-course studies to determine accurate DT50s and for detecting significant differences when comparing DT50 values between waterhemp populations12, these steps (as outlined in our excised leaf and vegetative cloning protocol) are critical for eliminating or reducing genetic and environmental variability.
Different mechanisms exist in plants for conferring herbicide resistance1,2. For example, waterhemp resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides can be target-site based14 or non-target-site based13. Metabolic rates of primisulfuron-methyl (Figure 3) clearly show these differences between two ALS-resistant waterhemp populations, MCR and ACR (Table 1). In combination with PCR amplification and sequence analysis of herbicide target-site genes, the excised leaf assay will greatly assist towards identifying whether herbicide resistance in waterhemp or other dicot weeds is conferred by target site or non-target-site mechanisms2.
Limitations of our excised leaf method include the inability to visualize or measure herbicide translocation patterns throughout the entire plant, or determine if cellular or sub-cellular sequestration mechanisms exist that confer non-target-site based resistance in weeds2. As mentioned previously, this aspect was also considered an advantage when determining precise herbicide metabolism rates in mesotrione-resistant weed populations12, but conversely could be considered a drawback when studying systemic herbicides that are not metabolized significantly in plants (i.e., non-selective herbicides) such as glyphosate2, or contact herbicides that are non-selective in natural weed populations, such as paraquat or glufosinate19. However, if target-site mechanisms are not revealed initially then enhanced rates of herbicide metabolism are typically investigated next1,4, particularly when studying weed resistance to HPPD-inhibiting herbicides such as mesotrione12, ALS-inhibiting herbicides such as primisulfuron-methyl13, photosystem II-inhibiting herbicides such as atrazine1,12, or acetyl-CoA-inhibiting herbicides4.
P450s have been associated with ALS resistance in an Echinochloa population20, a weedy grass species, as well as with mesotrione and ALS resistance in MCR12,13. A dioecious, dicot weed related to waterhemp, Palmer amaranth (A. palmeri), is also prone to developing herbicide resistance via several different mechanisms1-3. As more herbicide-resistant weed populations and species are documented throughout the world3, the need for rapidly examining herbicide metabolism as a potential resistance mechanism will continue to increase. The excised leaf approach, which is distinct but related to whole-plant studies typically used to investigate herbicide resistance mechanisms, is an accurate and valuable tool to evaluate and quantify herbicide metabolism in plants. As a result, the capability to perform these analyses with accurate, reproducible methods including the excised leaf assay will greatly assist researchers in determining non-target-site resistance mechanisms in both grass4 and dicot12 weeds.
Future applications of this method may also include determining rates of herbicide metabolism in dicot crops such as soybean and cotton. Ongoing research in our laboratory with herbicide-tolerant soybean varieties has also utilized the excised leaf approach. However, since soybeans are a legume crop with trifoliate leaves, an ‘excised petiole’ technique has been adapted and developed so that each trifoliolate leaf can absorb radiolabeled herbicide via uptake through the main petiole (Skelton, Lygin, and Riechers, unpublished data).
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Wendy Zhang, Austin Tom, Jacquie Janney, Erin Lemley, and Brittany Janney for assistance with plant growth and extractions, Dr. Anatoli Lygin for assistance with chromatographic analyses, and Syngenta Crop Protection for funding.
Agar | Sigma-Aldrich | A1296 | for pre-germinating seeds |
Potting medium | Sun Gro Horticulture | 49040233 | for plant growth |
Nutricote | Agrivert | TOTAL BLEND 13-13-13 T100 | slow-release fertilizer |
Growth chamber E15 | Controlled Environments Limited | 20207 | plant culturing |
Tris base | Fisher Scientific | BP152-500 | buffer for excised leaves |
HCl (concentrated) | Fisher Scientific | A144500 | adjust pH of buffer |
Murashige and Skoog (MS) salts | Sigma-Aldrich | M0404 | incubation of excised leaves |
Methanol | Fisher Scientific | A452-4 | leaf washes after incubation |
Acetone | Sigma-Aldrich | 179124 | plant extractions |
Acetonitrile (HPLC grade) | Macron Fine Chemicals | MKH07610 | HPLC mobile phase |
Formic acid | Mallinckrodt Analytical | MK259205 | acidify mobile phase pH |
Micro-centrifuge | Eppendorf | 5417R | 1.5 or 2.0 mL tubes |
Centrifuge (temperature controlled) | Eppendorf | 5810R | 15 or 50 mL tubes |
Polypropylene centrifuge tube | Corning Inc. | 430790 | 15 mL, sterile |
Rotary evaporator | BÜCHI | R200 | concentrate plant samples |
Liquid scintillation spectrometry (LSS) | Packard Instruments | 104470 | quantify 14C |
High-performance liquid chromatography | Perkin Elmer | N2910401 | resolve herbicide metabolites |
Flow scintillation analyzer | LabLogic System | 1103303 | for HPLC analysis of 14C |
Hypersil Gold C18 column | Thermo-Scientific | 03-050-522 | reversed phase |
Ultima-Flo M cocktail | Perkin Elmer | 6013579 | for Flow-scintillation analyzer |
Scintillation Cocktail (ScintiVerse BD) | Fisher Scientific | SX18 | for LSS; biodegradable |
Laboratory homogenizer | Kinematica | CH-6010 | homogenize leaf samples |