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Item Open Access Molecular genetics of glyphosate resistance in Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri L.)(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2009) Gaines, Todd A., author; Westra, Philip, advisor; Leach, Jan, advisorGlyphosate resistant Palmer amaranth populations were identified in Georgia in 2004. Studies were undertaken to characterize inheritance, the molecular basis of resistance, and the potential for gene transfer to related Amaranthus species. Dose response results support rejecting a monogenic inheritance hypothesis in favor of an alternative polygenic, additive inheritance model. Apomixis in genetic populations used for inheritance studies is probably occurring and makes interpretation of inheritance difficult. Glyphosate resistance in Palmer amaranth appears to be incompletely dominant and may be polygenic. No target site mutations known to confer resistance were identified in resistant alleles of the 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS) gene, the target of glyphosate. Estimation of gene copy numbers of EPSPS relative to acetolactate synthase (ALS) in gDNA by quantitative PCR (qPCR) suggested that resistant plant genomes contain 64 to 128 times more copies of EPSPS than susceptible plants. qPCR on cDNA revealed that EPSPS was expressed approximately 35 times higher in resistant plants. Elevated EPSPS copy number is heritable and correlates with expression level and resistance in F2 populations. The molecular basis of resistance is likely due to increased production of EPSPS due to gene amplification. This is the first documented occurrence of EPSPS gene amplification in a weed population under glyphosate selection pressure. The risk of resistance gene transfer was measured with field studies and hand crosses with A. hybridus, A. retroflexus, A. powellii, A. spinosus, and A. tuberculatus. Glyphosate application (0.4 kg ha-1) was used to screen for resistant progeny from the crosses. Hybridization with A. spinosus occurred in both years of the field study and in hand crosses, with average frequency ranging from <0.01% to 1.4%. Hybrids with A. spinosus were either monoecious or dioecious. Monoecious plants produced seed through self-pollination, and the F2 progeny were segregating for resistance. Hybridization occurred in the 2007 field study with A. hybridus (<0.01%) and A. tuberculatus (0.08% and 0.19% for two accessions), all of the hybrid plants were dioecious, and none produced seed. The highest risk for glyphosate resistance gene transfer from A. palmeri is to A. spinosus.