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Environmental risk assessment and field performance of rose (Rosa×hybrida) genetically modified for delphinidin production

Authors :
Masao Tasaka
Akihiro Matsunaga
Mie Yoshimoto
Yukihisa Katsumoto
Steve Chandler
Hirokazu Fukui
Mitsuhiro Aida
Noriko Nakamura
Yoshie Matsuda
Masako Fukuchi-Mizutani
Junichi Togami
Kanako Ishiguro
Mick Senior
Keiji Furuichi
Shinzo Tsuda
Yoshikazu Tanaka
Source :
Plant Biotechnology. 28:251-261
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Japanese Society for Plant Cell and Molecular Biology, 2011.

Abstract

The release of genetically modified plants into the environment can only occur after permission is obtained from the relevant regulatory authorities. This permission will only be obtained after extensive risk assessment shows comparable risk of impact to the environment and biodiversity as compared to non-transgenic host plants. Two transgenic rose (Rosa×hybrida) lines, whose flowers were modified to a bluer colour as a result of accumulation of delphinidin-based anthocyanins, have been trialed in greenhouses and the field in both Japan and Australia. Flower colour modification was due to expression of genes of a viola flavonoid 3′,5′-hydroxylase and a torenia anthocyanin 5-acyltransferase. In all trials it was shown that the performance of the two transgenic lines, as measured by their growth characters, was comparable to the host untransformed variety. Biological assay showed that the transgenic lines did not produce allelopathic compounds. In Japan, seeds from wild rose species that had grown in close proximity to the transgenic roses did not carry either a Rosa×hybrida specific marker gene or the transgenes. In hybridization experiments using transgenic rose pollen and wild rose female parents, the transgenes were not detected in the seed obtained, though there was a low frequency of seed set. The transgene was also not transmitted when Rosa×hybrida cultivars were used as females. In in situ hybridization analysis transgene transcripts were only detected in the epidermal cells in the petals of the transgenic roses. In combination, the breeding and in situ analysis results show that the transgenic roses contain the transgene only in the L1 layer cells and not in the L2 layer cells that generate reproductive cells. General release permissions have been granted for both transgenic lines in Japan and one is now commercially produced.

Details

ISSN :
13476114 and 13424580
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Biotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0db6edb3fa411b7004f82b6966678fa9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5511/plantbiotechnology.11.0113a