Rohidas Gilbile, R. Bhavani, Ritu Vyas
2017
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0
Influential Citations
1
Citations
Journal
Asian Journal of Chemistry
Abstract
Sulfonyl ureas are a series of environmentally well-suited herbicides that were discovered by DuPont Crop Protection in 1975 and first commercialized for wheat and barley crops in 1982. They have now been urbanized and commercialized worldwide in all main agronomic crops and for a lot of forte uses (e.g., range land/pasture, forestry, vegetation management). Sulfonyl ureas stand for a most important move ahead in global crop protection technology and have occupied a prominent key position in weed control by introducing a exclusive mode of action. Particularly, these compounds hinder with a key enzyme required for weed cell growth-acetolactate synthase. In addition, sulfonyl ureas are well-matched with the global drift toward post emergence weed control and integrated pest management. Sulfonyl ureas, a characteristic group of herbicides, were broadly applied to scheming a selection of weeds in a assortment of crops and vegetables [1]. These herbicides reveal a simple but effectual biological mode of action through inhibiting acetolactate synthase (ALS). Because there was no acetolactate synthase balance in mammals, they were capable at ultra-low application rates while exhibiting extremely low acute and chronic mammalian toxicities in assessment with other herbicides [2]. The structure of the yeast acetolactate Evaluation of Synthesis of Methyl 3-Chloro-5-(4,6-dimethoxypyrimidin2-ylcarbamoylsulfamoyl)-1-methylpyrazole-4-carboxylate Using Green Metrics