Auxin molecular field maps define AUX1 selectivity: many auxin herbicides are not substrates
* Developmental responses to auxin are regulated by facilitated uptake and efflux, but detailed molecular understanding of the carrier proteins is incomplete. * We have used pharmacological tools to explore the chemical space that defines substrate preferences for the auxin uptake carrier AUX1. Total and partial loss-of-function aux1 mutants were assessed against wild-type for dose-dependent resistance to a range of auxins and analogues. We then developed an auxin accumulation assay with associated mathematical modelling to enumerate accurate IC50 values for a small library of auxin analogues. The structure activity relationship data were analysed using molecular field analyses to create a pharmacophoric atlas of AUX1 substrates. * The uptake carrier exhibits a very high level of selectivity towards small substrates including the natural indole-3-acetic acid, and the synthetic auxin 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. No AUX1 activity was observed for herbicides based on benzoic acid (dicamba), pyridinyloxyacetic acid (triclopyr) or the 6-arylpicolinates (halauxifen), and very low affinity was found for picolinic acid-based auxins (picloram) and quinolinecarboxylic acids (quinclorac). * The atlas demonstrates why some widely used auxin herbicides are not, or are very poor substrates. We list molecular descriptors for AUX1 substrates and discuss our findings in terms of herbicide resistance management.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Not Open Access |
| Additional information | R.M.N. acknowledges support from BBSRC via grants BB/L009366 and BB/I023933/1 and an MIBTP studentship to M.Q. A.A.Y. was supported by a studentship from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, UK. K.H. was supported by the Czech Science Foundation, project no. 16-19557S; by MEYS of the Czech Rep., project no. LD 15137; and by the EU Operational Programme Prague –Competitiveness, project no. CZ.2.16/3.1.00/21519: Modern instruments for plant research. A.T. was supported by the Association of Commonwealth Universities award CP-2013-37. University of Warwick lead - project code not known |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:56 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:38 |
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