1. Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Australian rice varieties and promoter analysis of major pollen allergen gene, Ory s 1.
- Author
-
Azria D and Bhalla PL
- Subjects
- Agrobacterium tumefaciens genetics, Allergens metabolism, Australia, Gene Deletion, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Genes, Plant, Germination, Lilium genetics, Lilium metabolism, Onions genetics, Onions metabolism, Oryza growth & development, Oryza metabolism, Plant Proteins metabolism, Plants, Genetically Modified genetics, Plants, Genetically Modified growth & development, Plants, Genetically Modified metabolism, Pollen metabolism, Regeneration, Seeds genetics, Seeds growth & development, Seeds metabolism, Transformation, Genetic, Transgenes, Allergens genetics, Oryza genetics, Plant Proteins genetics, Pollen genetics, Promoter Regions, Genetic
- Abstract
A simple protocol for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Australian rice using mature embryos is described. Transgenic plants of two commercial genotypes of Australian rice, Amaroo and Millin, were produced. Transgenic plants were obtained by applying selection pressure to callus and to the regenerated shoots. Exclusion of the selective agent (hygromycin) during plant regeneration was found to be critical for recovery of transgenic plants from these commercial varieties. Transgenic plants were produced after 3 months. The developed system was also used to study spatial and temporal expression of a rice pollen-specific gene, Ory s 1. Expression of pOry s 1::uidA in transgenic rice demonstrated GUS expression in mature pollen, hence indicating potential use of this promoter to direct pollen-specific gene expression. Further Ory s 1 5' deletion study indicated that the pollen-specificity element may reside within -405 bp to the start of the transcription, while the region upstream of -405 contained a cis-acting regulatory element(s) responsible for quantitative expression of this gene.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF