Genetic characterization of a double-flowered tobacco plant obtained in a transformation experiment
β Scribed by T. Komari
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 945 KB
- Volume
- 80
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0040-5752
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β¦ Synopsis
A leaf-disk transformation experiment was performed with tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) using a binary vector and a strain of Agrobacterium tumefaciens that carried a wild-type Ti-plasmid, pTiBo542. Although the majority of kanamycin-resistant, transgenic plants was morphologically normal, one of the plants was double-flowered and had a slightly wavy stem and leaves whose edges were bent slightly upwards. The abnormal morphology was controlled by a single, dominant Mendelian gene. Young plants that carried this gene were distinguishable from normal plants at the stage of cotyledons. The homozygotes, with respect to this gene, were more seriously deformed than the heterozygotes. DNA segments derived from the binary vector and from the TL-and TR-DNA of pTiBo542 were detected in the double-flowered plant, but the T-DNA genes involved in biosynthesis of phytohormones were absent from the plant. The abnormal morphology, the resistance to kanamycin, and the segments of foreign DNA were genetically linked, and the linkage was very tight, at least between the abnormal morphology and the resistance to kanamycin; the meiotic recombination frequency was less than 0.02%, if recombination occurred at all.
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