All Stories

  1. Is There a Place for New Herbicides Targeting Photosynthetic Electron Transport?
  2. Enhanced metabolic detoxification is associated with fluroxypyr resistance in Bassia scoparia
  3. Unraveling the Role of P450 Reductase in Herbicide Metabolic Resistance Mechanism
  4. CYTOCHROME P450 CYP72A219 IS INVOLVED IN EVOLUTION OF METABOLIC RESISTANCE TO TEMBOTRIONE IN Amaranthus palmeri POPULATIONS
  5. Reduced irrigation impact on soil-applied herbicide dissipation and rotational crop response
  6. The nexus between reactive oxygen species and the mechanism of action of herbicides
  7. Enhanced metabolic detoxification is associated with fluroxypyr resistance in Bassia scoparia
  8. Recurrent Selection of Echinochloa crus-galli with a Herbicide Mixture Reduces Progeny Sensitivity
  9. Herbicidal Activity of Smoke Water
  10. Protoporphyrinogen oxidase inhibitors discovered by Artificial Intelligence platform
  11. Identification of a Novel 2,4-D Metabolic Detoxification Pathway in 2,4-D-Resistant Waterhemp (Amaranthus tuberculatus)
  12. 4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate Dioxygenase (HPPD)-Inhibiting Herbicides: Past, Present, and Future
  13. Synthesis and Activity of 2-Acyl-cyclohexane-1,3-dione Congeners Derived from Peperomia Natural Products against the Plant p-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate Dioxygenase Herbicidal Molecular Target Site
  14. Survey of ACCase and ALS resistance in winter annual grasses identifies target‐site and non‐target‐site imazamox resistance in Secale cereale
  15. Endothall and florpyrauxifen-benzyl behavior in Hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillate) when applied in combination
  16. Transgenerational Effect of Drought Stress and Sub-Lethal Doses of Quizalofop-p-ethyl: Decreasing Sensitivity to Herbicide and Biochemical Adjustment in Eragrostis plana
  17. Biochemical and structural characterization of quizalofop-resistant wheat acetyl-CoA carboxylase
  18. Transgenerational memory of drought stress and low rates of glyphosate reduce the sensitivity of Eragrostis plana to the herbicide
  19. Herbicide mixtures: interactions and modeling
  20. The search for new herbicide mechanisms of action – Is there a ‘holy grail’?
  21. 2,4‐D and 2,4‐D butoxyethyl ester behavior in E urasian and hybrid watermilfoil ( Myriophyllum spp.)
  22. Biochemical Basis for the Time-of-Day Effect on Glufosinate Efficacy against Amaranthus palmeri
  23. Biochemical Basis for the Time-of-day Effect on Glufosinate Efficacy Against Amaranthus palmeri
  24. ACCase-inhibiting herbicides: mechanism of action, resistance evolution and stewardship
  25. Conformation of the Intermediates in the Reaction Catalyzed by Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase: An In Silico Analysis
  26. Evolution of EPSPS double mutation imparting glyphosate resistance in wild poinsettia (Euphorbia heterophylla L.)
  27. A Trp574Leu Target-Site Mutation Confers Imazamox Resistance in Multiple Herbicide-Resistant Wild Poinsettia Populations from Brazil
  28. Glufosinate‐ammonium: a review of the current state of knowledge
  29. R128L Target Site Mutation in PPO2 Evolves in Wild Poinsettia (Euphorbia heterophylla) with Cross-Resistance to PPO-Inhibiting Herbicides
  30. Mechanisms of evolved herbicide resistance
  31. Glufosinate Enhances the Activity of Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Inhibitors
  32. A novel insight into the mode of action of glufosinate: how reactive oxygen species are formed
  33. Conservation and divergence in sorgoleone production of sorghum species
  34. Physiological Factors Affecting Uptake and Translocation of Glufosinate
  35. The Contribution of Romidepsin to the Herbicidal Activity of Burkholderia rinojensis Biopesticide
  36. Cinmethylin controls multiple herbicide‐resistant Lolium rigidum and its wheat selectivity is P450‐based
  37. Current Status and Future Prospects in Herbicide Discovery
  38. The Influence of Winter Annual Grass Litter on Herbicide Availability
  39. A novel TIPT double mutation in EPSPS conferring glyphosate resistance in tetraploid Bidens subalternans
  40. Role of Glutamine Synthetase Isogenes and Herbicide Metabolism in the Mechanism of Resistance to Glufosinate in Lolium perenne L. spp. multiflorum Biotypes from Oregon
  41. Reactive oxygen species trigger the fast action of glufosinate
  42. Fate of Glyphosate during Production and Processing of Glyphosate-Resistant Sugar Beet (Beta vulgaris)
  43. Assessment of the ecotoxicological impact of natural and synthetic β-triketone herbicides on the diversity and activity of the soil bacterial community using omic approaches
  44. Proline-106 EPSPS Mutation Imparting Glyphosate Resistance in Goosegrass (Eleusine indica) Emerges in South America
  45. Assessing Fitness Costs from a Herbicide-Resistance Management Perspective: A Review and Insight
  46. A novel genomic approach to herbicide and herbicide mode of action discovery
  47. Herbicides
  48. Introduction to Pest Management Science special issue for GHRC 2017
  49. Is There a Natural Route to the Next Generation of Herbicides?
  50. A cytochrome P450 CYP71 enzyme expressed in Sorghum bicolor root hair cells participates in the biosynthesis of the benzoquinone allelochemical sorgoleone
  51. Origins and Structure of Chloroplastic and Mitochondrial Plant Protoporphyrinogen Oxidases: Implications for Evolution of Herbicide Resistance
  52. Reversing resistance to tembotrione in an Amaranthus tuberculatus (var. rudis ) population from Nebraska, USA with cytochrome P450 inhibitors
  53. Evidence for photolytic and microbial degradation processes in the dissipation of leptospermone, a natural β-triketone herbicide
  54. A (–)-kolavenyl diphosphate synthase catalyzes the first step of salvinorin A biosynthesis in Salvia divinorum
  55. Allelopathic Potential of Sorghum ( Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) in Weed Control: A Comprehensive Review
  56. Khellin and Visnagin, Furanochromones from Ammi visnaga (L.) Lam., as Potential Bioherbicides
  57. Environmental Metabolic Footprinting: A novel application to study the impact of a natural and a synthetic β-triketone herbicide in soil
  58. Ecotoxicological Impact of the Bioherbicide Leptospermone on the Microbial Community of Two Arable Soils
  59. Glyphosate-Resistant and Conventional Canola (Brassica napusL.) Responses to Glyphosate and Aminomethylphosphonic Acid (AMPA) Treatment
  60. Nortriketones: Antimicrobial Trimethylated Acylphloroglucinols from Ma̅nuka (Leptospermum scoparium)
  61. Resistance to glufosinate is proportional to phosphinothricin acetyltransferase expression and activity in LibertyLink® and WideStrike® cotton
  62. Low doses of glyphosate change the responses of soyabean to subsequent glyphosate treatments
  63. Metabolic Profiling and Enzyme Analyses Indicate a Potential Role of Antioxidant Systems in Complementing Glyphosate Resistance in anAmaranthus palmeriBiotype
  64. Photolysis of natural β-triketonic herbicides in water
  65. EPSPSGene Amplification in Glyphosate-Resistant Italian Ryegrass (Lolium perennessp.multiflorum) Populations from Arkansas (United States)
  66. Biotechnology in Weed Control
  67. Sarmentine, a natural herbicide from Piper species with multiple herbicide mechanisms of action
  68. Possible Glyphosate Tolerance Mechanism in Pitted Morningglory ( Ipomoea lacunosa L.)
  69. Biochemical Markers and Enzyme Assays for Herbicide Mode of Action and Resistance Studies
  70. Discovery of New Herbicide Modes of Action with Natural Phytotoxins
  71. Concerted action of target-site mutations and high EPSPS activity in glyphosate-resistant junglerice (Echinochloa colona) from California
  72. Novel Bioassay for the Discovery of Inhibitors of the 2-C-Methyl-D-erythritol 4-Phosphate (MEP) and Terpenoid Pathways Leading to Carotenoid Biosynthesis
  73. Novel bacterial bioassay for a high-throughput screening of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase inhibitors
  74. Natural Compounds as Next-Generation Herbicides
  75. Evolution of resistance to phytoene desaturase and protoporphyrinogen oxidase inhibitors – state of knowledge
  76. Roots of the Invasive Species Carduus nutans L. and C. acanthoides L. Produce Large Amounts of Aplotaxene, a Possible Allelochemical
  77. The Growing Need for Biochemical Bioherbicides
  78. Involvement of facultative apomixis in inheritance of EPSPS gene amplification in glyphosate-resistant Amaranthus palmeri
  79. Insight into the Structural Requirements of Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Inhibitors: Molecular Docking and CoMFA of Diphenyl Ether, Isoxazole Phenyl, and Pyrazole Phenyl Ether
  80. Cover Picture: Insight into the Structural Requirements of Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Inhibitors: Molecular Docking and CoMFA of Diphenyl Ether, Isoxazole Phenyl, and Pyrazole Phenyl Ether (Chin. J. Chem. 9/2013)
  81. Herbicidal activity of formulated sorgoleone, a natural product of sorghum root exudate
  82. In planta Mechanism of Action of Leptospermone: Impact of Its Physico-Chemical Properties on Uptake, Translocation, and Metabolism
  83. Clues to New Herbicide Mechanisms of Action from Natural Sources
  84. Phytochemicals for Pest Management: Current Advances and Future Opportunities
  85. Oligofructans content and yield of yacon (Smallanthus sonchifolius) cultivated in Mississippi
  86. Correction: Duke, S.O., et al., Modes of Action of Microbially-Produced Phytotoxins. Toxins 2011, 3, 1038–1064
  87. EPSPS gene amplification in glyphosate‐resistant Italian ryegrass (Lolium perenne ssp. multiflorum) from Arkansas
  88. Simulated Acid Rain Accelerates Litter Decomposition and Enhances the Allelopathic Potential of the Invasive Plant Wedelia trilobata (Creeping Daisy)
  89. Natural Products As Sources for New Pesticides
  90. Tabanone, a New Phytotoxic Constituent of Cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica)
  91. Chlorophyll fluorescence as a marker for herbicide mechanisms of action
  92. Rationale for a natural products approach to herbicide discovery
  93. Validation of serine/threonine protein phosphatase as the herbicide target site of endothall
  94. Plant cell membrane as a marker for light-dependent and light-independent herbicide mechanisms of action
  95. Manuka Oil, A Natural Herbicide with Preemergence Activity
  96. In planta production of the highly potent resveratrol analogue pterostilbene via stilbene synthase and O‐methyltransferase co‐expression
  97. Modes of Action of Microbially-Produced Phytotoxins
  98. Effects of the aglycone of ascaulitoxin on amino acid metabolism in Lemna paucicostata
  99. Porphyrins: One Ring in the Colors of Life
  100. Evaluation of the toxicity of Streptomyces aburaviensis (R9) extract towards various agricultural pests
  101. Alkylresorcinol biosynthesis in plants
  102. Natural Products for Weed Management in Organic Farming in the USA
  103. Herbicides as Probes in Plant Biology
  104. Sorgoleone
  105. Introduction to the Symposium on Nonherbicide Use of Herbicides
  106. Biochemical and structural consequences of a glycine deletion in the α-8 helix of protoporphyrinogen oxidase
  107. Synthesis and antitubercular activity of heterocycle substituted diphenyl ether derivatives
  108. Alkylresorcinol Synthases Expressed in Sorghum bicolor Root Hairs Play an Essential Role in the Biosynthesis of the Allelopathic Benzoquinone Sorgoleone
  109. Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase-Inhibiting Herbicides
  110. Amicarbazone, a New Photosystem II Inhibitor
  111. Mineralization of the allelochemical sorgoleone in soil
  112. Natural products in crop protection
  113. β-Triketone Inhibitors of Plant p-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate Dioxygenase: Modeling and Comparative Molecular Field Analysis of Their Interactions
  114. The case against (–)-catechin involvement in allelopathy ofCentaurea stoebe(spotted knapweed)
  115. Dynamic root exudation of sorgoleone and its in planta mechanism of action
  116. Synthesis, antitubercular activity and docking study of novel cyclic azole substituted diphenyl ether derivatives
  117. Is (−)-Catechin a Novel Weapon of Spotted Knapweed (Centaurea stoebe)?
  118. Biological Activity of Allelochemicals
  119. The majority of in vitro macrophage activation exhibited by extracts of some immune enhancing botanicals is due to bacterial lipoproteins and lipopolysaccharides
  120. A Pathogenic Fungi Diphenyl Ether Phytotoxin Targets Plant Enoyl (Acyl Carrier Protein) Reductase
  121. NATURAL PRODUCTS FOR PEST MANAGEMENT
  122. Phytotoxic Eremophilanes from Ligularia macrophylla
  123. A Functional Genomics Investigation of Allelochemical Biosynthesis inSorghum bicolorRoot Hairs
  124. Biosynthesis of lipid resorcinols and benzoquinones in isolated secretory plant root hairs
  125. p-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase is a herbicidal target site for β-triketones from Leptospermum scoparium
  126. Biosynthesis of salvinorin A proceeds via the deoxyxylulose phosphate pathway
  127. The 2006 annual meeting of the Phytochemical Society of North America: Special issue of phytochemistry, phytochemistry pioneer awards and the 2006 meeting scientific highlights
  128. Molecular and Biochemical Characterization of Novel Polyketide Synthases Likely to Be Involved in the Biosynthesis of Sorgoleone
  129. A Functional Genomics Approach for the Identification of Genes Involved in the Biosynthesis of the Allelochemical Sorgoleone
  130. Characterization of a higher plant herbicide‐resistant phytoene desaturase and its use as a selectable marker
  131. Factors modulating the levels of the allelochemical sorgoleone in Sorghum bicolor
  132. Molecular and Biochemical Investigations of Sorgoleone Biosynthesis
  133. Hydrilla, the Perfect Aquatic Weed, Becomes More Noxious Than Ever
  134. Chemistry of the Lichen Hypogymnia physodes Transplanted to an Industrial Region
  135. Composition and Phytotoxic Activity ofNepeta pannonicaL. Essential Oil
  136. Molluscicidal activity of vulgarone B fromArtemisia douglasiana(Besser) against the invasive, alien, mollusc pest,Pomacea canaliculata(Lamarck)
  137. Patterns of essential oil relationships in Pimpinella (Umbelliferae) based on phylogenetic relationships using nuclear and chloroplast sequences
  138. Chemical Basis for Weed Suppressive Activity of Sorghum
  139. The potential for advances in crop allelopathy
  140. Melanin: dietary mucosal immune modulator from Echinacea and other botanical supplements
  141. RETRACTION
  142. Generation of reactive oxygen species by a novel anthraquinone derivative in the cyanobacterium Planktothrix perornata (Skuja)
  143. Molecular evolution of herbicide resistance to phytoene desaturase inhibitors in Hydrilla verticillata and its potential use to generate herbicide‐resistant crops
  144. New Herbicide Target Sites from Natural Compounds
  145. Somatic mutation‐mediated evolution of herbicide resistance in the nonindigenous invasive plant hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata)
  146. Physiological basis for resistance to diphenyl ether herbicides in common waterhemp (Amaranthus rudis)
  147. Arbuscular mycorrhiza improves acclimatization and increases lignan content of micropropagated mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum L.)
  148. Chromatographic Separation and in Vitro Activity of Sorgoleone Congeners from the Roots of Sorghum bicolor
  149. United States Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service research on natural products for pest management
  150. Elucidation of the Biosynthetic Pathway of the Allelochemical Sorgoleone Using Retrobiosynthetic NMR Analysis
  151. Activity of Quinones on Colletotrichum Species
  152. Podophyllum peltatum possesses a β-glucosidase with high substrate specificity for the aryltetralin lignan podophyllotoxin
  153. Trichomes and root hairs: natural pesticide factories
  154. PSII Inhibitory Activity of Resorcinolic Lipids from Sorghum bicolor
  155. Herbicides, Cinmethylin
  156. Herbicides, Carotenoid Biosynthesis Inhibitors
  157. Herbicides, Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Inhibitors
  158. Natural Phytotoxins with Potential for Development in Weed Management Strategies
  159. Octan-1-ol / Water Partition Coefficients of p-benzo-and p-naphthoquinones corrected for pH effect
  160. Phytotoxicity and volatile constituents from leaves of Callicarpa japonica Thunb.
  161. Composition of the essential oil of Lepidium meyenii (Walp.)
  162. Bioactivation of the Fungal Phytotoxin 2,5-Anhydro-D-glucitol by Glycolytic Enzymesisan Essential Component of itsMechanism of Action
  163. Physiological factors influencing the antifungal activity of zopfiellin
  164. The inhibitory activity of natural products on plant p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase
  165. Natural Pesticides
  166. Invited Paper: Chemicals from nature for weed management
  167. Terpenoid-Based Defense in Plants and Other Organisms
  168. Structural Diversity of Lichen Metabolites and Their Potential Use
  169. The lignans of Podophyllum
  170. Aryltetralin Lignans Inhibit Plant Growth by Affecting the Formation of Mitotic Microtubular Organizing Centers
  171. Lichens as a potential source of pesticides
  172. Strategies for Using Transgenes to Produce Allelopathic Crops 1
  173. Mode of Action, Localization of Production, Chemical Nature, and Activity of Sorgoleone: A Potent PSII Inhibitor in Sorghum spp. Root Exudates 1
  174. Phytotoxic and Fungitoxic Activities of the Essential Oil of Kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus L.) Leaves and Its Composition
  175. Synthesis, Herbicidal Activity, and Mode of Action of IR 5790
  176. Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Inhibitors
  177. Searching for Rice Allelochemicals
  178. Chapter Twelve Crop Allelopathy: Enhancement through biotechnology
  179. High Yield of Podophyllotoxin from Leaves of Podophyllum peltatum by In situ Conversion of Podophyllotoxin 4-O-β-D-Glucopyranoside
  180. ChemInform Abstract: Podophyllotoxin
  181. Natural products as sources for new mechanisms of herbicidal action
  182. The phytotoxic lichen metabolite, usnic acid, is a potent inhibitor of plant p‐hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase
  183. Amino- and Urea-Substituted Thiazoles Inhibit Photosynthetic Electron Transfer
  184. Composition and Some Biological Activities of the Essential Oil of Callicarpa americana (L.)
  185. Inhibition of Plant Asparagine Synthetase by Monoterpene Cineoles
  186. Podophyllotoxin
  187. Measuring Asparagine Synthetase Activity in Crude Plant Extracts
  188. ChemInform Abstract: Dehydrozaluzanin C, a Natural Sesquiterpenolide, Causes Rapid Plasma Membrane Leakage.
  189. 9,10‐Anthraquinone Reduces the Photosynthetic Efficiency of Oscillatoria perornata and Modifies Cellular Inclusions
  190. Behavior of sulfentrazone in ionic exchange resins, electrophoresis gels, and cation-saturated soils
  191. Natural products as sources of herbicides: current status and future trends
  192. Predicting the activity of the natural phytotoxic diphenyl ether cyperine using Comparative Molecular Field Analysis
  193. Dehydrozaluzanin C, a natural sesquiterpenolide, causes rapid plasma membrane leakage
  194. Phytotoxicity of Quassinoids: Physiological Responses and Structural Requirements
  195. Glutathione-Dependent Oxidative Modification of Protoporphyrin and Other Dicarboxylic Porphyrins by Mammalian and Plant Peroxidases
  196. Thiol-dependent degradation of protoporphyrin IX by plant peroxidases
  197. Comparative phytotoxicity of artemisinin and several sesquiterpene analogues
  198. Phytotoxic lignans of Leucophyllum frutescens
  199. Phytotoxic lignans ofLeucophyllum frutescens
  200. Joint action of natural and synthetic photosystem II inhibitors
  201. Joint action of natural and synthetic photosystem II inhibitors
  202. Structure-Activity Relationships of Diphenyl Ethers and Other Oxygen-Bridged Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Inhibitors
  203. A New Photosystem II Electron Transfer Inhibitor from Sorghum Bicolor
  204. A New Photosystem II Electron Transfer Inhibitor from Sorghum bicolor
  205. Inhibitory Activity of Sulfentrazone and Its Metabolic Derivatives on Soybean (Glycine max) Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase
  206. Horseradish Peroxidase-Dependent Oxidation of Deuteroporphyrin IX into Chlorins
  207. Selectivity and mode of action of carfentrazone-ethyl, a novel phenyl triazolinone herbicide
  208. Effects of Isoxazole Herbicides on Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase and Porphyrin Physiology
  209. Postemergence Activity of Sulfentrazone: Effects of Surfactants and Leaf Surfaces
  210. Oxidation of Porphyrinogens by Horseradish Peroxidase and Formation of a Green Pyrrole Pigment
  211. Physiological Basis for Differential Sensitivity to Sulfentrazone by Sicklepod (Senna obtusifolia) and Coffee Senna (Cassia occidentalis)
  212. Clues in the search for new herbicides
  213. BIOCONTROL OF WEEDS WITH ALLELOPATHY: CONVENTIONAL AND TRANSGENIC APPROACHES
  214. Modes of action of phytotoxins from plants