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Genetic modification in Pinus patula using transgenic technology.Nigro, Sara Anna. January 2006 (has links)
Progress in tree biotechnology initially trailed behind agricultural crops due to their long life cycle, difficult tissue culture and regeneration protocols, and their abundance in natural forests. However, rapid global deforestation rates, together with an increased world demand for pulp, paper and timber products, have prompted scientific and commercial focus to improve genetic timber stocks. South Africa, a tree-poor country (where indigenous forests are protected), has relied almost solely on exotic plantations to meet its demand for timber. A pioneer study investigating the feasibility of using direct (biolistic) and indirect (Agrobacterium-mediated) methods for gene transfer was undertaken in Pinus patula Schiede et Deppe, a Mexican softwood and a forerunner for saw timber,
pulpwood and paper in the South African forest industries. The aim of the
transformation methods was to impart herbicide resistance to the trees. This was achieved via the introduction of a bar-GUS pAHC25 cassette under the control of the ubiquitin promoter. To provide target material for transformation, two in vitro micropropagation pathways were used: somatic embryogenesis and organogenesis. Both embryonal suspensor masses (ESM) and somatic embryos at various stages of development were initially used as target explants for the biolistic study using an
established in vitro protocol. A stepwise selection was implemented in order to allow transformed (particularly bombarded) cultures the opportunity to regenerate under selection pressure using MSG3 maintenance medium supplemented with BASTA® herbicide at 1 mg l ¯¹ followed by 3 mg l¯¹ active ingredient at the next subculture. Biolistic transgene delivery was more efficient when sorbitol was included in the pre-bombardment medium enabling use of higher vacuum and shooting pressures, without lowering the regeneration potential of ESM significantly. Bombarded material from two genotypes (Lines 2 and 3) was regenerated to produce mature somatic embryos using an optimized regeneration
regimen. The indirect study with Agrobacterium tumefaciens (LBA4404),
transformed with the pAHC25 vector via triparental mating or heat shock, used a variety of target tissues including: mature somatic embryos, ESM and mature zygotic embryos (MZE's) - a novel in vitro system for P. patula. The Agrobacterium-mediated method resulted in optimized decontamination conditions using a combination of liquid MSG3 (or sterile dH₂O for mature embryos) supplemented with 500 mg l ¯¹ cefotaxime, with rotation, and sterile 65 mm Whatman No. 3 filter paper stacks, which avoided excess filtering and stress to transformation material. Further efforts to aid regeneration during the indirect study included L-proline post-transformation, though no mature somatic embryos were regenerated at the conclusion of the Agrobacterium-mediated study. Recovery of transformed ESM in both studies was best during the active growth
phase 4-6 d after subculture. Regeneration with good somatic embryo potential was an exigent aspect in both transformation studies. Expression of positive histochemical GUS activity in all transformed material was
confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis indicating that Pinus
patula tissue was amenable to transformation. A new bar PCR regime was
implemented in P. patula. In the biolistic study, a higher transformation efficiency of bar amplicons (53%) than GUS amplicons (45%) was observed, reflecting their non-linked status on the pAHC25 transformation vector. This is the first report of biolistic transformation of P. patula that will allow for the production of transgenic ESM. The production of transgenic P. patula holds great promise for commercial development in the South African forestry industry. The application of transgenic trees in the timber industry is numerous but the aims most relevant to P. patula include wood modification and disease resistance to pathogens like pitch canker fungus. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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