253 research outputs found
Invariant differential equations and the Adler-Gel'fand-Dikii bracket
In this paper we find an explicit formula for the most general vector evolution of curves on RP^{n-1} invariant under the projective action of SL(n,R). When this formula is applied to the projectivization of solution curves of scalar Lax operators with periodic coefficients, one obtains a corresponding evolution in the space of such operators. We conjecture that this evolution is identical to the second KdV Hamiltonian evolution under appropriate conditions. These conditions give a Hamiltonian interpretation of general vector differential invariants for the projective action of SL(n,R), namely, the SL(n,R) invariant evolution can be written so that a general vector differential invariant corresponds to the Hamiltonian pseudo-differential operator. We find common coordinates and simplify both evolutions so that one can attempt to prove the equivalence for arbitrary n
RNA and protein biomarkers for detecting enhanced metabolic resistance to herbicides mesosulfuron-methyl and fenoxaprop-ethyl in black-grass (Alopecurus myosuroides)
BACKGROUND: The evolution of non-target site resistance (NTSR) to herbicides leads to a significant reduction in herbicide control of agricultural weed species. Detecting NTSR in weed populations prior to herbicide treatment would provide valuable information for effective weed control. While not all NTSR mechanisms have been fully identified, enhanced metabolic resistance (EMR) is one of the better studied, conferring tolerance through increased herbicide detoxification. Confirming EMR towards specific herbicides conventionally involves detecting metabolites of the active herbicide molecule in planta, but this approach is time consuming and requires access to well-equipped laboratories.
RESULTS: In this study, we explore the potential of using molecular biomarkers to detect EMR before herbicide treatment in black-grass (Alopecurus myosuroides). We test the reliability of selected biomarkers to predict EMR, and survival after herbicide treatments in both reference and 27 field-derived black-grass populations collected from sites across the UK. The combined analysis of the constitutive expression of biomarkers, and metabolism studies confirmed three proteins namely, AmGSTF1, AmGSTU2 and AmOPR1, as differential biomarkers of EMR toward the herbicides fenoxaprop-ethyl and mesosulfuron in black-grass.
CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that there is potential to use molecular biomarkers to detect EMR toward specific herbicides in black-grass without reference to metabolism analysis. However, biomarker development must include testing at both transcript and protein levels in order to be reliable indicators of resistance. This work is a first step towards more robust resistance biomarker development, which could be expanded into other herbicide chemistries, for on-farm testing and monitoring EMR in uncharacterised black-grass populations
RNA and protein biomarkers for detecting enhanced metabolic resistance to herbicides mesosulfuron-methyl and fenoxaprop-ethyl in black-grass (<em>Alopecurus myosuroides</em>)
\ua9 2024 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry. BACKGROUND: The evolution of non-target site resistance (NTSR) to herbicides leads to a significant reduction in herbicide control of agricultural weed species. Detecting NTSR in weed populations prior to herbicide treatment would provide valuable information for effective weed control. While not all NTSR mechanisms have been fully identified, enhanced metabolic resistance (EMR) is one of the better studied, conferring tolerance through increased herbicide detoxification. Confirming EMR towards specific herbicides conventionally involves detecting metabolites of the active herbicide molecule in planta, but this approach is time-consuming and requires access to well-equipped laboratories. RESULTS: In this study, we explored the potential of using molecular biomarkers to detect EMR before herbicide treatment in black-grass (Alopecurus myosuroides). We tested the reliability of selected biomarkers to predict EMR and survival after herbicide treatments in both reference and 27 field-derived black-grass populations collected from sites across the UK. The combined analysis of the constitutive expression of biomarkers and metabolism studies confirmed three proteins, namely, AmGSTF1, AmGSTU2 and AmOPR1, as differential biomarkers of EMR toward the herbicides fenoxaprop-ethyl and mesosulfuron in black-grass. CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that there is potential to use molecular biomarkers to detect EMR toward specific herbicides in black-grass without reference to metabolism analysis. However, biomarker development must include testing at both transcript and protein levels in order to be reliable indicators of resistance. This work is a first step towards more robust resistance biomarker development, which could be expanded into other herbicide chemistries for on-farm testing and monitoring EMR in uncharacterised black-grass populations. \ua9 2024 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry
The blackgrass genome reveals patterns of non-parallel evolution of polygenic herbicide resistance
Globally, weedy plants are a major constraint to sustainable crop production. Much of the success of weeds rests with their ability to rapidly adapt in the face of human-mediated management of agroecosystems. Alopecurus myosuroides (blackgrass) is a widespread and impactful weed affecting agriculture in Europe. Here we report a chromosome-scale genome assembly of blackgrass and use this reference genome to explore the genomic/genetic basis of non-target site herbicide resistance (NTSR). Based on our analysis of F2 seed families derived from two distinct blackgrass populations with the same NTSR phenotype, we demonstrate that the trait is polygenic and evolves from standing genetic variation. We present evidence that selection for NTSR has signatures of both parallel and non-parallel evolution. There are parallel and non-parallel changes at the transcriptional level of several stress- and defense-responsive gene families. At the genomic level, however, the genetic loci underpinning NTSR are different (non-parallel) between seed families. We speculate that variation in the number, regulation and function of stress- and defense-related gene families enable weedy species to rapidly evolve NTSR via exaptation of genes within large multi-functional gene families. These results provide novel insights into the potential for, and nature of plant adaptation in rapidly changing environments
Integrable generalizations of Schrodinger maps and Heisenberg spin models from Hamiltonian flows of curves and surfaces
A moving frame formulation of non-stretching geometric curve flows in
Euclidean space is used to derive a 1+1 dimensional hierarchy of integrable
SO(3)-invariant vector models containing the Heisenberg ferromagnetic spin
model as well as a model given by a spin-vector version of the mKdV equation.
These models describe a geometric realization of the NLS hierarchy of soliton
equations whose bi-Hamiltonian structure is shown to be encoded in the Frenet
equations of the moving frame. This derivation yields an explicit
bi-Hamiltonian structure, recursion operator, and constants of motion for each
model in the hierarchy. A generalization of these results to geometric surface
flows is presented, where the surfaces are non-stretching in one direction
while stretching in all transverse directions. Through the Frenet equations of
a moving frame, such surface flows are shown to encode a hierarchy of 2+1
dimensional integrable SO(3)-invariant vector models, along with their
bi-Hamiltonian structure, recursion operator, and constants of motion,
describing a geometric realization of 2+1 dimensional bi-Hamiltonian NLS and
mKdV soliton equations. Based on the well-known equivalence between the
Heisenberg model and the Schrodinger map equation in 1+1 dimensions, a
geometrical formulation of these hierarchies of 1+1 and 2+1 vector models is
given in terms of dynamical maps into the 2-sphere. In particular, this
formulation yields a new integrable generalization of the Schrodinger map
equation in 2+1 dimensions as well as a mKdV analog of this map equation
corresponding to the mKdV spin model in 1+1 and 2+1 dimensions.Comment: Published version with typos corrected. Significantly expanded
version of a talk given by the first author at the 2008 BIRS workshop on
"Geometric Flows in Mathematics and Physics
Symplectically-invariant soliton equations from non-stretching geometric curve flows
A moving frame formulation of geometric non-stretching flows of curves in the
Riemannian symmetric spaces and is
used to derive two bi-Hamiltonian hierarchies of symplectically-invariant
soliton equations. As main results, multi-component versions of the sine-Gordon
(SG) equation and the modified Korteweg-de Vries (mKdV) equation exhibiting
invariance are obtained along with their bi-Hamiltonian
integrability structure consisting of a shared hierarchy of symmetries and
conservation laws generated by a hereditary recursion operator. The
corresponding geometric curve flows in and
are shown to be described by a non-stretching wave map and a
mKdV analog of a non-stretching Schr\"odinger map.Comment: 39 pages; remarks added on algebraic aspects of the moving frame used
in the constructio
Alterations in life-history associated with non-target-site herbicide resistance in Alopecurus myosuroides
The evolution of resistance to herbicides is a classic example of rapid contemporary adaptation in the face of a novel environmental stress. Evolutionary theory predicts that selection for resistance will be accompanied by fitness trade-offs in environments where the stress is absent. Alopecurus myosuroides, an autumn-germinating grass weed of cereal crops in North-West Europe, has evolved resistance to seven herbicide modes-of-action, making this an ideal species to examine the presence and magnitudes of such fitness costs. Here, we use two contrasting A. myosuroides phenotypes derived from a common genetic background, one with enhanced metabolism resistance to a commercial formulation of the sulfonylurea (ALS) actives mesosulfuron and iodosulfuron, and the other with susceptibility to these actives (S). Comparisons of plant establishment, growth, and reproductive potential were made under conditions of intraspecific competition, interspecific competition with wheat, and over a gradient of nitrogen deprivation. Herbicide dose response assays confirmed that the two lines had contrasting resistance phenotypes, with a 20-fold difference in resistance between them. Pleiotropic effects of resistance were observed during plant development, with R plants having a greater intraspecific competitive effect and longer tiller lengths than S plants during vegetative growth, but with S plants allocating proportionally more biomass to reproductive tissues during flowering. Direct evidence of a reproductive cost of resistance was evident in the nitrogen deprivation experiment with R plants producing 27 percent fewer seed heads per plant, and a corresponding 23 percent reduction in total seed head length. However, these direct effects of resistance on fecundity were not consistent across experiments. Our results demonstrate that a resistance phenotype based on enhanced herbicide metabolism has pleiotropic impacts on plant growth, development and resource partitioning but does not support the hypothesis that resistance is associated with a consistent reproductive fitness cost in this species. Given the continued difficulties associated with unequivocally detecting costs of herbicide resistance, we advocate future studies that adopt classical evolutionary quantitative genetics approaches to determine genetic correlations between resistance and fitness-related plant life history trait
Constant Curvature Coefficients and Exact Solutions in Fractional Gravity and Geometric Mechanics
We study fractional configurations in gravity theories and Lagrange
mechanics. The approach is based on Caputo fractional derivative which gives
zero for actions on constants. We elaborate fractional geometric models of
physical interactions and we formulate a method of nonholonomic deformations to
other types of fractional derivatives. The main result of this paper consists
in a proof that for corresponding classes of nonholonomic distributions a large
class of physical theories are modelled as nonholonomic manifolds with constant
matrix curvature. This allows us to encode the fractional dynamics of
interactions and constraints into the geometry of curve flows and solitonic
hierarchies.Comment: latex2e, 11pt, 27 pages, the variant accepted to CEJP; added and
up-dated reference
- …