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Dive into the research topics where William B. McCloskey is active.

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Featured researches published by William B. McCloskey.


Pest Management Science | 2018

Survey of the genomic landscape surrounding the 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS) gene in glyphosate-resistant Amaranthus palmeri from geographically distant populations in the USA

William T. Molin; Alice A. Wright; Mark J. VanGessel; William B. McCloskey; Mithila Jugulam; Robert E. Hoagland

BACKGROUND Glyphosate resistance in Amaranthus palmeri, one of the most prevalent herbicide-resistant weeds in the USA, is attributable to amplification and increased expression of the gene encoding the target site of glyphosate, 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS). The EPSPS gene and the surrounding 287 kilobases (kb) of amplified sequence are unique to glyphosate-resistant plants and termed the EPSPS cassette. It has only been sequenced in one A. palmeri population from Mississippi. This research compares EPSPS cassettes in seven resistant and five sensitive populations from geographically distant locations within the USA, including Mississippi, Arizona, Kansas, Maryland, Delaware and Georgia. RESULTS Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products from 40 primer pairs specific to the cassette were similar in size and sequence in resistant populations. Several primer pairs failed to generate PCR products in sensitive populations. Regions of the cassette sequenced in the resistant populations were found to be nearly identical to those from Mississippi. Gene expression analysis showed that both EPSPS and another gene in the cassette, a reverse transcriptase, were elevated in all resistant populations tested relative to the sensitive populations. CONCLUSION EPSPS cassettes from distant resistant populations were nearly homologous. Considering the complexity of the cassette, and the degree of similarity among some cassette sequences, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that glyphosate resistance probably evolved once and then rapidly spread across the USA.


Pest Management Science | 2017

Survey of the genomic landscape surrounding the EPSPS gene in glyphosate resistant Amaranthus palmeri from geographically distant populations in the United States

William T. Molin; Alice A. Wright; Mark J. VanGessel; William B. McCloskey; Mithila Jugulam; Robert E. Hoagland

BACKGROUND Glyphosate resistance in Amaranthus palmeri, one of the most prevalent herbicide-resistant weeds in the USA, is attributable to amplification and increased expression of the gene encoding the target site of glyphosate, 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS). The EPSPS gene and the surrounding 287 kilobases (kb) of amplified sequence are unique to glyphosate-resistant plants and termed the EPSPS cassette. It has only been sequenced in one A. palmeri population from Mississippi. This research compares EPSPS cassettes in seven resistant and five sensitive populations from geographically distant locations within the USA, including Mississippi, Arizona, Kansas, Maryland, Delaware and Georgia. RESULTS Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products from 40 primer pairs specific to the cassette were similar in size and sequence in resistant populations. Several primer pairs failed to generate PCR products in sensitive populations. Regions of the cassette sequenced in the resistant populations were found to be nearly identical to those from Mississippi. Gene expression analysis showed that both EPSPS and another gene in the cassette, a reverse transcriptase, were elevated in all resistant populations tested relative to the sensitive populations. CONCLUSION EPSPS cassettes from distant resistant populations were nearly homologous. Considering the complexity of the cassette, and the degree of similarity among some cassette sequences, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that glyphosate resistance probably evolved once and then rapidly spread across the USA.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Population Genetic Structure in Glyphosate-Resistant and -Susceptible Palmer Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) Populations Using Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS)

Anita Küpper; Harish Manmathan; Darci A Giacomini; Eric L. Patterson; William B. McCloskey; Todd A. Gaines

Palmer amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) is a major weed in United States cotton and soybean production systems. Originally native to the Southwest, the species has spread throughout the country. In 2004 a population of A. palmeri was identified with resistance to glyphosate, a herbicide heavily relied on in modern no-tillage and transgenic glyphosate-resistant (GR) crop systems. This project aims to determine the degree of genetic relatedness among eight different populations of GR and glyphosate-susceptible (GS) A. palmeri from various geographic regions in the United States by analyzing patterns of phylogeography and diversity to ascertain whether resistance evolved independently or spread from outside to an Arizona locality (AZ-R). Shikimic acid accumulation and EPSPS genomic copy assays confirmed resistance or susceptibility. With a set of 1,351 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), discovered by genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS), UPGMA phylogenetic analysis, principal component analysis, Bayesian model-based clustering, and pairwise comparisons of genetic distances were conducted. A GR population from Tennessee and two GS populations from Georgia and Arizona were identified as genetically distinct while the remaining GS populations from Kansas, Arizona, and Nebraska clustered together with two GR populations from Arizona and Georgia. Within the latter group, AZ-R was most closely related to the GS populations from Kansas and Arizona followed by the GR population from Georgia. GR populations from Georgia and Tennessee were genetically distinct from each other. No isolation by distance was detected and A. palmeri was revealed to be a species with high genetic diversity. The data suggest the following two possible scenarios: either glyphosate resistance was introduced to the Arizona locality from the east, or resistance evolved independently in Arizona. Glyphosate resistance in the Georgia and Tennessee localities most likely evolved separately. Thus, modern farmers need to continue to diversify weed management practices and prevent seed dispersal to mitigate herbicide resistance evolution in A. palmeri.


Industrial Crops and Products | 2011

Lesquerella: New crop development and commercialization in the U.S.

David A. Dierig; Guangyao Wang; William B. McCloskey; Kelly R. Thorp; Terry A. Isbell; Dennis T. Ray; M.A. Foster


Horttechnology | 2003

Managing Orchard Floor Vegetation in Flood-irrigated Citrus Groves

Glenn C. Wright; William B. McCloskey; Kathryn C. Taylor


Agronomy Journal | 2006

Water-Stress-Induced Changes in Resin and Rubber Concentration and Distribution in Greenhouse-Grown Guayule

Maren E. Veatch-Blohm; Dennis T. Ray; William B. McCloskey


Irrigation and Drainage | 2006

Effects of chemicals on root intrusion into subsurface drip emitters

Elisa M. Suarez-Rey; Christopher Y. Choi; William B. McCloskey; David M. Kopec


Industrial Crops and Products | 2014

Lesquerella seed and oil yield response to split-applied N fertilizer

Jiangang Liu; Kevin F. Bronson; Kelly R. Thorp; Jarai Mon; Mohammad Badaruddin; William B. McCloskey; Dennis T. Ray; Qingquan Chu; Guangyao Wang


Citrus Research Report | 1996

Managing Vegetation on the Orchard Floor in Flood Irrigated Arizona Citrus Groves

William B. McCloskey; Glenn C. Wright; Kathryn C. Taylor


Citrus and Deciduous Fruit and Nut Research Report | 1999

Evaluation and management of a "salina" strawberry clover cover crop in citrus: first year preliminary results

William B. McCloskey; Glenn C. Wright

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Alice A. Wright

United States Department of Agriculture

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Kelly R. Thorp

United States Department of Agriculture

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Robert E. Hoagland

United States Department of Agriculture

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William T. Molin

United States Department of Agriculture

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