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Engineered selective plant male sterility through pollen-specific expression of the Eco RI restriction endonuclease.

Authors :
Millwood, Reginald J.
Moon, Hong S.
Poovaiah, Charleson R.
Muthukumar, Balasubramaniam
Rice, John Hollis
Abercrombie, Jason M.
Abercrombie, Laura L.
Green, William Derek
Stewart, Charles Neal
Source :
Plant Biotechnology Journal; May2016, Vol. 14 Issue 5, p1281-1290, 10p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Unintended gene flow from transgenic plants via pollen, seed and vegetative propagation is a regulatory concern because of potential admixture in food and crop systems, as well as hybridization and introgression to wild and weedy relatives. Bioconfinement of transgenic pollen would help address some of these concerns and enable transgenic plant production for several crops where gene flow is an issue. Here, we demonstrate the expression of the restriction endonuclease Eco RI under the control of the tomato pollen-specific LAT52 promoter is an effective method for generating selective male sterility in Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco). Of nine transgenic events recovered, four events had very high bioconfinement with tightly controlled Eco RI expression in pollen and negligible-to-no expression other plant tissues. Transgenic plants had normal morphology wherein vegetative growth and reproductivity were similar to nontransgenic controls. In glasshouse experiments, transgenic lines were hand-crossed to both male-sterile and emasculated nontransgenic tobacco varieties. Progeny analysis of 16 000-40 000 seeds per transgenic line demonstrated five lines approached (>99.7%) or attained 100% bioconfinement for one or more generations. Bioconfinement was again demonstrated at or near 100% under field conditions where four transgenic lines were grown in close proximity to male-sterile tobacco, and 900-2100 seeds per male-sterile line were analysed for transgenes. Based upon these results, we conclude Eco RI-driven selective male sterility holds practical potential as a safe and reliable transgene bioconfinement strategy. Given the mechanism of male sterility, this method could be applicable to any plant species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14677644
Volume :
14
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plant Biotechnology Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
114490888
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.12493