Karl Ravet

and 15 more

Genomic-based epidemiology can provide insight into the origins and spread of herbicide resistance mechanisms in weeds. We used kochia (Bassia scoparia) populations resistant to the herbicide glyphosate from across western North America to test the alternative hypotheses that 1) a single EPSPS gene duplication event occurred initially in the Central Great Plains and then subsequently spread to all other geographical areas now exhibiting glyphosate-resistant kochia populations or that 2) gene duplication occurred multiple times in independent events in a case of parallel evolution. We used qPCR markers previously developed for measuring the various units of the EPSPS tandem duplication to investigate whether all glyphosate-resistant plants had the same EPSPS repeat structure. We also investigated population structure using simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers to determine the relatedness of kochia populations from across the Central Great Plains, Northern Plains, and the Pacific Northwest. We identified three distinct EPSPS-duplication haplotypes that had geographic associations with the Central Great Plains, Northern Plains, and Pacific Northwest. Population structure revealed a group of populations around the first reported occurrence of glyphosate resistance in the Central Great Plains, a separate group of Pacific Northwest populations, and some relatedness of populations from geographically isolated areas. The results support at least three independent origins of glyphosate resistance in kochia, followed by substantial and mostly geographically localized gene flow to spread the resistance alleles into diverse genetic backgrounds.

Todd Gaines

and 9 more

Amaranthus palmeri is a widespread glyphosate-resistant (GR) weed in the USA. Since 2015, GR populations of A. palmeri have been confirmed in South America, raising the prospect of an ongoing invasion. We used RAD-Seq genotyping to explore genetic differentiation amongst A. palmeri populations from Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay. We also quantified gene copy number amplification of the glyphosate target, 5-enolpyruvyl-3-shikimate phosphate synthase (EPSPS) and the presence of an extra-chromosomal circular DNA (eccDNA) replicon in these populations. Genetic analyses indicated that populations in Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay were only weakly differentiated (pairwise FST  0.043) in comparison to USA populations. STRUCTURE analysis did, however, assign Argentinean populations to a discrete cluster to those from Brazil and Uruguay. Neither elevated EPSPS copy number, nor the eccDNA EPSPS replicon were present in Argentinean populations, this being consistent with recent observations of other GR mechanisms in Argentina, and an independent in situ evolution of glyphosate resistance. Elevated EPSPS copy number and the EPSPS replicon were identified in all populations from Brazil and Uruguay. The presence of this mechanism and the very high sequence similarity of the EPSPS replicon to that found in the USA are strongly suggestive of the recent invasion of GR into Brazil and Uruguay. Our results are consistent with a single introduction of A. palmeri into South America sometime before the 1980s, and subsequent local evolution of GR in Argentina but with a secondary invasion of GR A. palmeri from the USA into Brazil and Uruguay during the 2010’s.