Unraveling the role of fermentation in the mode of action of acetolactate synthase inhibitors by metabolic profiling.

J Plant Physiol

Departamento de Ciencias del Medio Natural, Universidad Pública de Navarra, Campus Arrosadia, E-31006 Pamplona, Spain.

Published: September 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Herbicides like imazethapyr (IM) induce aerobic fermentation in plants by inhibiting the synthesis of branched chain amino acids, but the specific role of fermentation in their effectiveness is unclear.
  • A study comparing IM's effects on pea plants with hypoxia and pyruvate feeding showed that IM treatment caused internal anoxia and quicker fermentation initiation without immediately reducing energy levels.
  • The metabolic profiling revealed that IM complicates carbon and nitrogen metabolism, leading to a build-up of carbohydrates and glycolytic intermediates, which is associated with growth arrest in the plants.

Article Abstract

Herbicides that inhibit branched chain amino acid biosynthesis induce aerobic fermentation. The role of fermentation in the mode of action of these herbicides is not known, nor is the importance of this physiological response in the growth inhibition and the lethality caused by them. Metabolic profiling was used to compare the effects of the herbicide imazethapyr (IM) on pea plants with two other treatments that also induce fermentation: hypoxia and the exogenous supply pyruvate for seven days. While hypoxic roots did not show internal anoxia, feeding pyruvate or applying IM to the roots led to internal anoxia, probably related to the respiratory burst detected. The three treatments induced ethanol fermentation, but fermentation induced following herbicide treatment was earlier than that following pyruvate supply and was not associated with a decrease in the energy status. No striking changes were detected in the metabolic profiling of hypoxic roots, indicating that metabolism was only slightly impaired. Feeding pyruvate resulted in marked succinate accumulation and a general amino acid accumulation. IM-treated roots showed a general accumulation of glycolytic metabolites upstream of pyruvate, a decrease in some TCA intermediates and an increase in the free amino acid pool sizes. All treatments caused GABA and putrescine accumulation. Our results indicate that IM supply impairs carbon/nitrogen metabolism and this impaired metabolism is likely to be related to the growth arrest detected. As growth is arrested, carbohydrates and glycolytic intermediates accumulate and energy becomes more available.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jplph.2011.02.015DOI Listing

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