| Services |
 |
|
| News |
|
 |
|
| Channels |
| Home & Family |
|
| Leisure |
|
| Technology |
|
| Business |
|
| Science |
 |
|
Site Search  |
 |
|
| Free email |
 |
|
|
 |
Researchers identify natural herbicide that controls weeds around some common lawn grasses |
| TheAllINeed.com |
(NC&T/CU) Cornell researchers have identified the herbicide as an amino acid called meta-tyrosine, or m-tyrosine, that these lawn grasses exude from their roots in large amounts. This amino acid is a close relative of para-tyrosine (p-tyrosine), one of the 20 common amino acids that form proteins.
Reporting on the discovery in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, Frank Schroeder, the paper's senior author and an assistant scientist at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research on Cornell's campus, said, "We at first didn't believe m-tyrosine had anything to do with the observed herbicidal activity, but then we tested it and found it to be extremely toxic to plants but not toxic to fungi, mammals or bacteria."
Co-author Cecile Bertin, Ph.D. '05, research director for PharmAfrican, a Montreal-based bio-pharmaceuticals company, made the initial discovery that fescue grasses inhibit plants from growing around them.
While m-tyrosine itself is too water soluble to be applied directly as a herbicide, this research may lead to development of new varieties of fescue grasses that suppress weeds more effectively, which could reduce the need for synthetic herbicides, said Schroeder. By increasing our understanding of basic plant biology, the discovery of m-tyrosine's herbicidal properties could also help researchers discover more sustainable ways to control weeds or completely new herbicides, Schroeder added.
He and his colleagues are now conducting experiments to understand how m-tyrosine works as a plant killer. Plants depend on the production of large amounts of another common amino acid, phenylalanine, which is essential for the biosynthesis of wood, cell walls and lignin.
 | | This image shows fescue grass roots, which exude a yellow material that contains an amino acid called m-tyrosine as a major component. The chemical structure for m-tyrosine is superimposed on the photo. (Photo: Frank Schroeder) |
"Phenylalanine, m-tyrosine and p-tyrosine are structurally all very similar," said Schroeder. "Because of this similarity, we think that m-tyrosine might simulate high concentrations of phenylalanine, which would normally provide negative feedback for phenylalanine biosynthesis" and, thereby, suppress plant growth.
Schroeder and colleagues are also trying to understand why fescue grasses do not succumb to the toxin themselves. They found that when phenylalanine was added to plants dying from m-tyrosine exposure, they recovered. As a result, the researchers suspect that these fescue varieties may overproduce phenylalanine to save themselves from their own toxin.
People have not recognized how effective some fescue varieties are at suppressing weeds because m-tyrosine production appears to be highly dependent on environmental conditions, Schroeder said, which is another area that the researchers are currently investigating.
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, New York State Turfgrass Association, the National Science Foundation and Triad Foundation.
|
| About the Author |
©2006 All rights reserved
|
|
 |
| Quotes | I dont know which is worse, ...that everyone has his price, or that theprice is always so low. -Calvin
I dont like electrons; theyve always had a negative influence on society. — Chris Lipe.
I canna change the laws of physics, Captain — but I can find ye a loophole.
I could charge you with sexual assault, but I wont if you sleep with me. - Marian to Byron
|
| Writers | | If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit. |
|