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Hypothesis: Transgene establishment in wild relatives of wheat can be prevented by utilizing the Ph1 gene as a senso stricto chaperon to prevent homoeologous recombination

Authors :
Moshe Feldman
Jonathan Gressel
Sarit Weissmann
Source :
Plant Science. 175:410-414
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

Durum and bread wheat need transgenic traits such as herbicide and disease resistance due to recent evolution of herbicide resistant grass weeds and an intractable new strain of stem rust. Transgenic wheat varieties have not been commercialized partly due to potential transgene movement to wild/weedy relatives, which occurs naturally to closely related Aegilops and other spp. Recombination does not occur in the F 1 hybrid between wheat and its relatives due to the presence of the Ph 1 gene on wheat chromosome arm 5BL, which acts as a chaperone, preventing promiscuous homoeologous pairing to similar, but not homologous chromosomes of the wild/weedy species. Thus recombination must occur during backcrossing after the wheat Ph 1 gene has been eliminated. Based on these findings, we speculate that Ph 1 could be used to prevent gene introgression into weedy relatives. We propose two methods to prevent such transgene establishment: (1) link the transgene in proximity to the wheat Ph 1 gene and (2) insert the transgene in tandem with the lethal barnase on any chromosome arm other than 5BL, and insert barstar , which suppresses barnase on chromosome arm 5BL in proximity to Ph 1. The presence of Ph 1 in backcross plants containing 5BL will prevent the homoeologous establishment of barnase coupled to the desired transgene in the wild population. 5BL itself will be eliminated during repeated backcrossing to the wild parent, and progeny bearing the desired transgene in tandem with barnase but without the Ph 1- barstar complex will die.

Details

ISSN :
01689452
Volume :
175
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2cf63e0925296101feb540f077556584
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2008.05.014