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1.
Summary Cultures of Nicotiana tabacum cells homozgous for a mutation (S4) at the SuRB locus that confers resistance to the sulfonylurea herbicides chlorsulfuron and sulfometuron methyl (Chaleff and Ray 1984; Chaleff and Bascomb 1987) were used to isolate a doubly mutant cell line (S4 Hra/S4+) resistant to even higher herbicide concentrations. Growth of cells homozygous for both the S4 and Hra mutations (S4 Hra/S4 Hra) was uninhibited by a herbicide concentration 500-fold higher than a concentration by which growth of S4+/S4+ callus was inhibited by 75%. Plants homozygous for both mutations were at least five-fold more resistant to foliar applications of chlorsulfuron than were singly mutant S4+/S4+ plants. This enhanced resistance was inherited as a single, semidominant, nuclear trait that is genetically linked to the S4 mutation. Acetolactate synthase (ALS) activity in extracts of leaves of doubly mutant (S4 Hra/S4 Hra) plants was approximately 20-fold more resistant to inhibition by chlorsulfuron and sulfometuron methyl than was ALS activity in singly mutant (S4+/ S4+) leaf extracts, which was in turn more resistant to inhibition by these compounds than was the normal enzyme. Extracts prepared from plants of these three genotypes possessed the same ALS specific activities. Therefore, Hra represents a second independent mutation at or near the SuRB locus that reduces the sensitivity of tobacco ALS activity to inhibition by sulfonylurea herbicides.  相似文献   

2.
Mazur BJ  Chui CF  Smith JK 《Plant physiology》1987,85(4):1110-1117
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) is the first common enzyme in the biosynthetic pathways to valine, isoleucine, and leucine. It is the target of two structurally unrelated classes of herbicides, the sulfonylureas and the imidazolinones. Genomic clones encoding ALS have been isolated from the higher plants Arabidopsis thaliana and Nicotiana tabacum, using a yeast ALS gene as a heterologous hybridization probe. Clones were positively identified by the homology of their deduced amino acid sequences with those of yeast and bacterial ALS isozymes. The tobacco and Arabidopsis ALS genes have approximately 70% nucleotide homology, and encode mature proteins which are approximately 85% homologous. Little homology is seen between the amino acid sequences of the presumptive N-terminal chloroplast transit peptides. Both plant genes lack introns. The tobacco ALS gene was isolated from a line of tobacco which is resistant to the sulfonylurea herbicides due to an alteration in ALS. The tobacco gene which was isolated codes for an ALS that is sensitive to the herbicides, as assayed by transformation of the gene into sensitive tobacco cells.  相似文献   

3.
Selection of kochia (Kochia scoparia) biotypes resistant to the sulfonylurea herbicide chlorsulfuron has occurred through the continued use of this herbicide in monoculture cereal-growing areas in the United States. The apparent sulfonylurea resistance observed in kochia was confirmed in greenhouse tests. Fresh and dry weight accumulation in the resistant kochia was 2- to >350-fold higher in the presence of four sulfonylurea herbicides as compared to the susceptible biotype. Acetolactate synthase (ALS) activity isolated from sulfonylurea-resistant kochia was less sensitive to inhibition by three classes of ALS-inhibiting herbicides, sulfonylureas, imidazolinones, and sulfonanilides. The decrease in ALS sensitivity to inhibition (as measured by the ratio of resistant I50 to susceptible I50) was 5- to 28-fold, 2- to 6-fold, and 20-fold for sulfonylurea herbicides, imidazolinone herbicides, and a sulfonanilide herbicide, respectively. No differences were observed in the ALS-specific activities or the rates of [14C]chlorsulfuron uptake, translocation, and metabolism between susceptible and resistant kochia biotypes. The Km values for pyruvate using ALS from susceptible and resistant kochia were 2.13 and 1.74 mm, respectively. Based on these results, the mechanism of sulfonylurea resistance in this kochia biotype is due solely to a less sulfonylurea-sensitive ALS enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The molecular basis of sulfonylurea herbicide resistance in tobacco   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The enzyme acetolactate synthase (ALS) is the target enzyme for the sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides. We describe the isolation and characterization of the ALS genes from two herbicide-resistant mutants, C3 and S4-Hra, of Nicotiana tabacum. There are two distinct ALS genes in tobacco which are 0.7% divergent at the amino acid sequence level. The C3 mutant has a single Pro-Gln replacement at amino acid 196 in one ALS gene. This gene is termed the class I gene and is equivalent to the SuRA locus. The S4-Hra mutant has two amino acid changes in the other ALS gene. This gene is termed the class II gene or the SuRB locus. The S4-Hra mutant includes a Pro-Ala substitution at amino acid 196 and a Trp-Leu substitution at amino acid 573. Gene reintroduction experiments have confirmed that these amino acid substitutions are responsible for the herbicide resistance phenotypes. Transgenic plants carrying these genes are highly resistant to sulfonylurea herbicide applications.  相似文献   

5.
 Sugarbeets are sensitive to imidazolinone herbicide residues applied to rotational crops. Two imidazolinone-resistance (IMI-R) sugarbeet traits were developed by somatic cell selection to overcome rotation restrictions for sugarbeets where imidazolinones have been applied. Sir-13 is an IMI-R/SU-S (sulfonylurea-sensitive) variant selected from an imidazolinone-sensitive (IMI-S) sugarbeet clone, REL-1. A second variant, 93R30B, resistant to imidazolinone as well as to sulfonylurea herbicides (IMI-R/SU-R), was selected from a plant homozygous for a previously described sulfonylurea-specific resistance trait, Sur (IMI-S/SU-R). The IMI-R alleles (Sir-13 and 93R30B) were found to be corresponding allelic variants at the same ALS locus and both were tightly associated with the Sur allele. Each resistant allele is dominant to the sensitive wild-type allele; however, incomplete dominance is shown among resistance alleles. Diploid sugarbeet contains a single ALS gene copy, limiting the ability to stack these resistance traits in the same plant by traditional breeding. Received: 1 May 1997 / Accepted: 30 June 1997  相似文献   

6.
This study investigates mechanisms of multiple resistance to glyphosate, acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (ACCase) and acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides in two Lolium rigidum populations from Australia. When treated with glyphosate, susceptible (S) plants accumulated 4- to 6-fold more shikimic acid than resistant (R) plants. The resistant plants did not have the known glyphosate resistance endowing mutation of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3 phosphate synthase (EPSPS) at Pro-106, nor was there over-expression of EPSPS in either of the R populations. However, [14C]-glyphosate translocation experiments showed that the R plants in both populations have altered glyphosate translocation patterns compared to the S plants. The R plants showed much less glyphosate translocation to untreated young leaves, but more to the treated leaf tip, than did the S plants. Sequencing of the carboxyl transferase domain of the plastidic ACCase gene revealed no resistance endowing amino acid substitutions in the two R populations, and the ALS in vitro inhibition assay demonstrated herbicide-sensitive ALS in the ALS R population (WALR70). By using the cytochrome P450 inhibitor malathion and amitrole with ALS and ACCase herbicides, respectively, we showed that malathion reverses chlorsulfuron resistance and amitrole reverses diclofop resistance in the R population examined. Therefore, we conclude that multiple glyphosate, ACCase and ALS herbicide resistance in the two R populations is due to the presence of distinct non-target site based resistance mechanisms for each herbicide. Glyphosate resistance is due to reduced rates of glyphosate translocation, and resistance to ACCase and ALS herbicides is likely due to enhanced herbicide metabolism involving different cytochrome P450 enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Chlorsulfuron and/or imazaquin resistant mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii strain CW15 have been obtained and shown to have actolactate synthase (ALS) with altered sensitivity to one or both of these herbicides. Herbicide resistance in the three mutants described is allelic, and resistance appears to result from a dominant or semidominant mutation in a single, nuclear gene. Imazaquin and chlorsulfuron resistant ALS from imazaquin and chlorsulfuron resistant mutants, together with single-gene Mendelian inheritance of these phenotypes, suggests that ALS is the sole site of action of the two herbicides in Chlamydomonas. A high degree of cross resistance between the two herbicides was found in only one mutant. This mutant (IM-13) was selected for resistance to imazaquin and has a high level of in vitro resistance to both imazaquin (270-fold increased I50) and chlorsulfuron (900-fold increased I50). In another mutant selected for resistance to imazaquin (IMR-2), hyper-sensitivity to chlorsulfuron was found. A mutant selected for resistance to chlorsulfuron (CSR-5), had a substantial degree of resistance of chlorsulfuron (80-fold increased I50), but not to imazaquin (7-fold increased I50).  相似文献   

8.
Summary The acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) gene from the Arabidopsis thaliana mutant line GH90 carrying the imidazolinone resistance allele imr1 was cloned. Expression of the AHAS gene under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter in transgenic tobacco resulted in selective imidazolinone resistance, confirming that the single base-pair change found near the 3 end of the coding region of this gene is responsible for imidazolinone resistance. A chimeric AHAS gene containing both the imr1 mutation and the csr1 mutation, responsible for selective resistance to sulfonylurea herbicides, was constructed. It conferred on transgenic tobacco plants resistance to both sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides. The data illustrate that a multiple-resistance phenotype can be achieved in an AHAS gene through combinations of separate mutations, each of which individually confers resistance to only one class of herbicides.  相似文献   

9.
K. Wu  G. Mourad  J. King 《Planta》1994,192(2):249-255
A valine-resistant mutant line, VAL-2, ofArabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. was identified by screening M 2 populations of ethylmethane-sulfonate-mutagenized seeds. The resistance was found to be due to a single, dominant, nuclear gene mutation. Assay of acetolactate synthase (ALS) indicated that the valine resistance in this mutant is caused by decreased sensitivity of ALS to the branched-chain amino acids, valine, leucine andisoleucine. A two fold decrease in apparentK m value for pyruvate of the mutant ALS enzyme was detected compared with that of the wild type. The sensitivity of the ALS enzyme to sulfonylurea, imidazolinone and triazolopyrimidine herbicides was not altered in the mutant. At the plant growth level the mutant was also resistant to valine plus leucine, but was sensitive to leucine orisoleucine alone. The mutant gene,var1, maps, or is very closely linked, toCSR1, the gene encoding acetolactate synthase inArabidopsis.Abbreviations ALS acetolactate synthase - BCAA branched-chain amino acid - CS chlorsulfuron - IM imidazolinone - SU sulfonylurea - TP triazolopyrimidine We thank Dr. George W. Haughn for providing Arabidopsis lines MSU12, MSU15, MSU21, MSU22 and MSU23. This work was supported by a Research Grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to J.K., K.W. is grateful for a University of Saskatchewan Graduate Scholarship.  相似文献   

10.
George Mourad  John King 《Planta》1992,188(4):491-497
We have isolated a triazolopyrimidine-resistant mutant csrl-2, of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. Here, we compare csrl-2 with the previously isolated mutants csrl and csr1-1, and with wild-type Arabidopsis for responses to members of four classes of herbicides, namely, sulfonylureas, triazolopyrimidines, imidazolinones, and pyrimidyl-oxy-benzoates. Two separable herbicide binding sites have been identified previously on the protein of acetolactate synthase (ALS). Here, the mutation giving rise to csrl, originating in a coding sequence towards the 5 end of the ALS gene, and that in csrl-2, affected the inhibitory action on growth and ALS activity of sulfonylurea and triazolopyrimidine herbicides but not that of the imidazolinones or pyrimidyl-oxybenzoates. The other mutation, in csrl-1, originating in a coding sequence towards the 3 end of the ALS gene, affected the inhibitory action of imidazolinones and pyrimidyl-oxy-benzoates but not that of the sulfonylureas or triazolopyrimidines. Additional, stimulatory effects of some of these herbicides on growth of seedlings was unrelated to their effect on their primary target, ALS. The conclusion from these observations is that one of the two previously identified herbicide-binding sites may bind sulfonylureas and triazolopyrimidines while the other may bind imidazolinones and pyrimidyl-oxy-benzoates within a herbicide-binding domain on the ALS enzyme. Such a comparative study using near-isogenic mutants from the same species allows not only the further definition of the domain of herbicide binding on ALS but also could aid investigation of the relationship between herbicide-, substrate-, and allosteric-binding sites on this enzyme.This research was supported by an Operating Grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to J.K.Abbreviations ALS acetolactate synthase - EMS ethylmethane sulfonate - POB pyrimidyl-oxy-benzoate The authors thank Mr. David Williams for his expert technical assistance and Mr. Dennis Dyck for help in preparing the figures.  相似文献   

11.
Roles of conserved methionine residues in tobacco acetolactate synthase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine. ALS is the target of several classes of herbicides, including the sulfonylureas, the imidazolinones, and the triazolopyrimidines. The conserved methionine residues of ALS from plants were identified by multiple sequence alignment using ClustalW. The alignment of 17 ALS sequences from plants revealed 149 identical residues, seven of which were methionine residues. The roles of three well-conserved methionine residues (M350, M512, and M569) in tobacco ALS were determined using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutation of M350V, M512V, and M569V inactivated the enzyme and abolished the binding affinity for cofactor FAD. Nevertheless, the secondary structure of each of the mutants determined by CD spectrum was not affected significantly by the mutation. Both M350C and M569C mutants were strongly resistant to three classes of herbicides, Londax (a sulfonylurea), Cadre (an imidazolinone), and TP (a triazolopyrimidine), while M512C mutant did not show a significant resistance to the herbicides. The mutant M350C was more sensitive to pH change, while the mutant M569C showed a profile for pH dependence activity similar to that of wild type. These results suggest that M512 residue is likely located at or near the active site, and that M350 and M569 residues are probably located at the overlapping region between the active site and a common herbicide binding site.  相似文献   

12.
WLR1, a biotype of Lolium rigidum Gaud. that had been treated with the sulfonylurea herbicide chlorsulfuron in 7 consecutive years, was found to be resistant to both the wheat-selective and the nonselective sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides. Biotype SLR31, which became cross-resistant to chlorsulfuron following treatment with the aryloxyphenoxypropionate herbicide diclofop-methyl, was resistant to the wheat-selective, but not the nonselective, sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides. The concentrations of herbicide required to reduce in vitro acetolactate synthase (ALs) activity 50% with respect to control assays minus herbicide for biotype WLR1 was greater than those for susceptible biotype VLR1 by a factor of >30, >30, 7,4, and 2 for the herbicides chlorsulfuron, sulfometuron-methyl, imazapyr, imazathapyr, and imazamethabenz, respectively. ALS activity from biotype SLR31 responded in a similar manner to that of the susceptible biotype VLR1. The resistant biotypes metabolized chlorsulfuron more rapidly than the susceptible biotype. Metabolism of 50% of [phenyl-U-14C]chlorsulfuron in the culms of two-leaf seedlings required 3.7 h in biotype SLR31, 5.1 h in biotype WLR1, and 7.1 h in biotype VLR1. In all biotypes the metabolism of chlorsulfuron in the culms was more rapid than that in the leaf lamina. Resistance to ALS inhibitors in L. rigidum may involve at least two mechanisms, increased metabolism of the herbicide and/or a herbicide-insensitive ALS.  相似文献   

13.
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine in plants and microorganisms. ALS is the target of several structurally diverse classes of herbicides, including sulfonylureas, imidazolinones, and triazolopyrimidines. The roles of three well-conserved histidine residues (H351, H392, and H487) in tobacco ALS were determined using site-directed mutagenesis. Both H487F and H487L mutations abolished the enzymatic activity as well as the binding affinity for the cofactor FAD. Nevertheless, the mutation of H487F did not affect the secondary structure of the ALS. The K(m) values of H351M, H351Q, and H351F are approximately 18-, 60-, and fivefold higher than that of the wild-type ALS, respectively. Moreover, the K(c) value of H351Q for FAD is about 137-fold higher than that of wALS. Mutants H351M and H351Q showed very strong resistance to Londax (a sulfonylurea) and Cadre (an imidazolinone), whereas mutant H351F was weakly resistant to them. However, the secondary structures of mutants H351M and H351Q appeared to be different from that of wALS. The mutation of H392M did not have any significant effect on the kinetic parameters nor the resistance to ALS-inhibiting herbicides. These results suggest that the His487 residue is located at the active site of the enzyme and is likely involved in the binding of cofactor FAD in tobacco ALS. Mutational analyses of the His351 residue imply that the active site of the ALS is probably close to its binding site of the herbicides, Londax and Cadre.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Fourteen transgenic flax (Linum usitatissimum) lines, carrying a mutant Arabidopsis acetolactate synthase (ALS) gene selected for resistance to chlorsulfuron, were characterized for resistance to two sulfonylurea herbicides. Progeny of 10 of the 14 lines segregated in a ratio of 3 resistant to 1 susceptible, indicating a single insertion. Progeny of 1 line segregated in a 151 ratio, indicating two insertions of the ALS gene at independent loci. Progeny from 3 lines did not segregate in a Mendelian fashion and were likely the products of chimeric shoots. Resistance to chlorsulfuron was stably inherited in all lines. At the enzyme level, the transgenic lines were 2.5 to more than 60 times more resistant to chlorsulfuron than the parental lines. The transgenic lines were 25–260 times more resistant to chlorsulfuron than the parental lines in root growth experiments and demonstrated resistance when grown in soil treated with 20 g ha-1 chlorsulfuron. The lines demonstrated less resistance to metsulfuron methyl; in root growth experiments, the transgenic lines were only 1.6–4.8 times more resistant to metsulfuron methyl than the parental lines. Resistance was demonstrated in the field at half (2.25 g ha-1) and full (4.5 g ha-1) rates of metsulfuron methyl.  相似文献   

15.
Acetolactate synthase (ALS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine. The ALS is the target of several classes of herbicides, including the sulfonylureas, the imidazolinones, and the triazolopyrimidines. The roles of three well-conserved lysine residues (K219, K255, K299) in tobacco ALS were determined using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutation of K219Q inactivated the enzyme and abolished the binding affinity for cofactor FAD. However, the secondary structure of the enzyme was not changed significantly by the mutation. Both mutants, K255F and K255Q, showed strong resistance to three classes of herbicides Londax (a sulfonylurea), Cadre (an imidazolinone), and TP (a triazolopyrimidine). In addition, there was no difference in the secondary structures of wALS and K255F. On the other hand, the mutation of K299Q did not show any significant effect on the kinetic properties or any sensitivity to the herbicides. These results suggest that Lys219 is located at the active site and is likely involved in the binding of FAD, and that Lys255 is located at a binding site common for the three herbicides in tobacco ALS.  相似文献   

16.
Lang ZF  Shen JJ  Cai S  Zhang J  He J  Li SP 《Current microbiology》2011,63(2):145-150
A multiple herbicide-resistant acetohydroxyacid synthase (rAHAS) gene was cloned from Pseudomonas sp. Lm10. Sequence analysis showed that the rAHAS regulatory subunit was identical to that of Pseudomonas putida KT2440 (sensitive AHAS, sAHAS), whereas six different sites [H134→N (rAHAS→sAHAS), A135→P, S136→T, I210→V, F264→Y, and S486→W] were found in the catalytic subunit. The rAHAS and sAHAS were over expressed, purified and characterized. rAHAS showed higher resistance to four kinds of AHAS-inhibitor herbicides than sAHAS. The resistance factor of rAHAS was 56.0-fold, 12.6-fold, 6.5-fold, and 9.2-fold as compared with sAHAS when metsulfuron-methyl, imazethapyr, flumetsulam, and pyriminobac-methyl used as inhibitor, respectively. The specific activity of rAHAS was lower than that of sAHAS and the K m value of rAHAS for pyruvate was approximately onefold higher than the corresponding value for sAHAS. Data from site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that alteration at A135, F264, and S486 resulted in resistance reduction, while the mutation at H134, S136, and I210 has little effect on the resistance. A135 was mainly responsible for resistance to imidazolinone; F264 conferred resistance to sulfonylurea and triazolopyrimidine sulfonamide; and S486 showed multiple herbicides resistance to the four herbicides.  相似文献   

17.
Strain L36, naturally resistant to the herbicide metsulfuron-methyl (SM), was isolated and characterized with respect to the molecular mechanism of resistance. The isolate was identified as Pseudomonas aeruginosa based on bacterial morphology, physiology, cellular fatty acid, and 16S rRNA gene sequence. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of metsulfuron-methyl against the growth of L36 and wild type isolate PAO1 were 6.03 and 1.33 mM, respectively. L36 carried a nucleotide base change in the acetolactate synthase (ALS) gene that coded for a single amino acid mutation (Ala29 → Val29). The mutated ilvIH gene was functionally expressed, purified, and the kinetic properties of the purified ALS were tested. The mutant enzyme had K m for pyruvate fourfold higher than the wild type enzyme, and K i app for sulfonylureas some 30-fold higher. The A29 V mutation in the ALS resulted in the resistance of P. aeruginosa to sulfonylurea herbicides but not to imidazolinone herbicides.  相似文献   

18.
Acetolactate synthase (ALS), the first enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway of leucine, isoleucine, and valine, is inhibited by imidazolinone herbicides. To understand the molecular basis of imidazolinone resistance, we isolated the ALS gene from an imazapyr-resistant mutant GH90 of Arabidopsis thaliana. DNA sequence analysis of the mutant ALS gene demonstrated a single-point mutation from G to A at nucleotide 1958 of the ALS-coding sequence. This would result in Ser to Asn substitution at residue 653 near the carboxyl terminal of the matured ALS. The mutant ALS gene was introduced into tobacco using Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Imidazolinone-resistant growth of transformed calli and leaves of transgenic plants was 100-fold greater than that of nontransformed control plants. The relative levels of imidazolinone-resistant ALS activity correlated with the amount of herbicide-resistant growth in the leaves of transgenic plants. Southern hybridization analysis confirmed the existence of transferred ALS gene in the transformant showing high imazapyr resistance. The results demonstrate that the mutant ALS gene confers resistance to imidazolinone herbicides. This is the first report, to our knowledge, of the molecular basis of imidazolinone resistance in plants.  相似文献   

19.
Genomic and cDNA clones of the acetolactate synthase (ALS) gene of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been isolated from a mutant, c85-20 (Hartnett et al., 1987), that is resistant to high concentrations of sulfometuron methyl (SMM) and related sulfonylurea herbicides. Comparison of the ALS gene sequences from the wild-type and the SMM resistant (SMMr) strains revealed two amino acid differences in the mature enzyme, a lysine to threonine change at position 257 (K257T) and a leucine to valine change at position 294 (L294V). Transformation of wild-type C. reinhardtii with the mutant ALS gene produced no transformants with ability to grow in the presence of a minimum toxic concentration of SMM (3 microm). Substitution of the ALS promoter with the promoter of the C. reinhardtii Rubisco small subunit gene (RbcS2) permitted recovery of SMMr colonies. In vitro mutagenesis of the wild-type ALS gene to produce various combinations of mutations (K257T, L294V and W580L) indicated that the K257T mutation was necessary and sufficient to confer the SMMr phenotype. Optimum transformation rates were obtained with two constructs (pJK7 and pRP-ALS) in which all introns in the coding region were present. Rates of transformation with construct pJK7 were approximately 2.5 x 10-4 transformants/cell (i.e. one transformant for each of 4000 initial cells) using electroporation and 8.5 x 10-6 transformants/cell using the glass bead vortexing method. These results suggest that pJK7 and pRP-ALS can serve as important additional dominant selectable markers for the genetic transformation of C. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

20.
S. C. Falco  K. S. Dumas 《Genetics》1985,109(1):21-35
Sulfometuron methyl (SM), a potent new sulfonylurea herbicide, inhibits growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae on minimal media. Sixty-six spontaneous mutants resistant to SM were isolated. All of the resistance mutations segregate 2:2 in tetrads; 51 of the mutations are dominant, five are semidominant and ten are recessive. The mutations occur in three linkage groups, designated SMR1, smr2 and smr3. Several lines of evidence demonstrate that the SMR1 mutations (47 dominant and four semidominant) are alleles of ILV2 which encodes acetolactate synthase (ALS), the target of SM. First, SMR1 mutations result in the production of ALS enzyme activity with increased resistance to SM. Second, molecular cloning of the ILV2 gene permitted the isolation of mutations in the cloned gene which result in the production of SM-resistant ALS. Finally, SMR1 mutations map at the ILV2 locus. The smr2 mutations (four recessive, two dominant and one semidominant) map at the pdr 1 (pleiotropic drug resistance) locus and show cross-resistance to other inhibitors, typical of mutations at this locus. The smr3 mutations (six recessive and two dominant) define a new gene which maps approximately midway between ADE2 and HIS3 on the right arm of chromosome XV.  相似文献   

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