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Multiple evolutionary origins of herbicide-resistant Bromus tectorum:
insights into genetic variation and population structure
Abstract
The repeated evolution of herbicide resistance in agriculture provides
an unprecedented opportunity to understand how organisms rapidly respond
to strong anthropogenic-driven selection pressure. In populations of the
grass species Bromus tectorum L., resistance to multiple herbicides has
been recently identified. To understand the evolutionary origins and
spread of resistance, we investigated the resistance mechanisms in 49 B.
tectorum populations to acetolactate synthase (ALS) inhibitors and
photosystem II inhibitors, two widely used herbicide modes of action. We
assessed the genetic diversity, structure, and relatedness in a subset
of 21 populations. Resistance to ALS inhibitors was associated with
multiple types of non-synonymous mutations in ALS, the target site gene.
Mechanisms not related to the target site evolved and were common in the
populations studied. Resistance to photosystem II inhibitors was
confirmed in two populations and was conferred by non-synonymous
mutations in the plastid gene psbA. Population genetics analyses showed
low levels of genetic diversity, suggesting that local selection
pressure processes have shaped the populations. We also found evidence
of long-distance gene flow among distinct growing regions and cropping
systems. The results suggest that both gene flow via pollen and/or seed
dispersal, and multiple local and independent evolutionary events were
involved in the spread of herbicide-resistant B. tectorum. Our results
provide an empirical example of the rapid repeated evolution of a trait
under strong anthropogenic selection and elucidate the evolutionary
origins of herbicide resistance in a plant species of agricultural
importance.