Doses that provide the most control of the disease also provide the largest selection pressure to acquire resistance. In some cases, the pathogen evolves resistance to multiple fungicides, a phenomenon known as
cross resistance. These additional fungicides typically belong to the same chemical family, act in the same way, or have a similar mechanism for detoxification. Sometimes negative
cross-resistance occurs, where resistance to one chemical class of fungicides increases sensitivity to a different chemical class of fungicides. This has been seen with
carbendazim and
diethofencarb. Also possible is resistance to two chemically different fungicides by separate mutation events. For example,
Botrytis cinerea is resistant to both azoles and
dicarboximide fungicides. A common mechanism for acquiring resistance is alteration of the target enzyme. For example,
Black Sigatoka, an economically important pathogen of banana, is resistant to the
QoI fungicides, due to a single
nucleotide change resulting in the replacement of one
amino acid (glycine) by another (alanine) in the target protein of the QoI fungicides,
cytochrome b. It is presumed that this disrupts the binding of the fungicide to the protein, rendering the fungicide ineffective. Upregulation of target genes can also render the fungicide ineffective. This is seen in DMI-resistant strains of
Venturia inaequalis. Resistance to fungicides can also be developed by efficient
efflux of the fungicide out of the cell.
Septoria tritici has developed multiple drug resistance using this mechanism. The pathogen had five
ABC-type transporters with overlapping
substrate specificities that together work to pump toxic chemicals out of the cell. In addition to the mechanisms outlined above, fungi may also develop
metabolic pathways that circumvent the target protein, or acquire
enzymes that enable the metabolism of the fungicide to a harmless substance. Fungicides that are at risk of losing their potency due to resistance include
Strobilurins such as
azoxystrobin.
Fungicide resistance management Cross-resistance can occur because the active ingredients share a common mode of action. The industry-sponsored Fungicide Resistance Action Committee (FRAC), whose parent organization is
CropLife International, advises on the use of fungicides in crop protection and classifies the available compounds according to their chemical structures and
mechanism of action so as to
manage the risks of resistance developing. The 2024 FRAC poster of fungicides includes all the chemicals mentioned in this article. == Regulations ==