Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice

The inheritance and expression of a transgene locus consisting of multiple copies of a rice chitinase gene under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter was studied in the T3and T4generations of a transformed line that expressed the chitinase at a high level. All T3progeny of a homozygous T2parent expr...

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Main Authors: S. Chareonpornwattana, K. V. Thara, L. Wang, S. Muthukrishnan, S. K. Datta, W. Panbangred
Other Authors: Kansas State University
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Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25312
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spelling th-mahidol.253122018-09-07T15:49:17Z Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice S. Chareonpornwattana K. V. Thara L. Wang S. Muthukrishnan S. K. Datta W. Panbangred Kansas State University Mahidol University International Rice Research Institute Agricultural and Biological Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology The inheritance and expression of a transgene locus consisting of multiple copies of a rice chitinase gene under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter was studied in the T3and T4generations of a transformed line that expressed the chitinase at a high level. All T3progeny of a homozygous T2parent expressed the chitinase constitutively at 3 weeks after germination, but a proportion of the progeny had undetectable levels of chitinase 8 weeks after germination, indicating silencing of the transgene. Transgene silencing was also observed among progeny of a hemizygous parent. However, we did not observe chitinase gene silencing among progeny of another homozygous line that expressed the transgenic chitinase at a five- to tenfold lower level. Thus, expression level, rather than copy number, of the transgene appears to be critical for silencing. Silencing was observed in the leaf, sheath, and root tissues of the plant, indicating that it is not restricted to specific tissues. Silencing was first observed in the youngest leaves and only later in the oldest leaves of the same plant. There was co-silencing of the selectable marker gene, hpt, which is also driven by the CaMV 35S promoter. Unlike the two transgenes (chitinase and marker), the resident homologous chitinase gene with seed-specific expression and two nonhomologous chitinase genes induced in the leaves upon pathogen infection were not silenced. The silent phenotype was inherited in the T4generation plants, while progeny of expressing plants exhibited silencing. The chitinase transgene appeared intact, and no evidence for gross alterations or methylation of CCGG sites was found. The silent phenotype could not be reversed by treatment with 5-azacytidine. Northern blot analysis and nuclear run-on transcription studies indicated that silencing occurred at the transcriptional level. The implications of transgene silencing in genetic engineering of monocot plants for disease resistance are discussed. 2018-09-07T08:47:45Z 2018-09-07T08:47:45Z 1999-01-01 Article Theoretical and Applied Genetics. Vol.98, No.3-4 (1999), 371-378 10.1007/s001220051082 00405752 2-s2.0-0032913363 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25312 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=0032913363&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
spellingShingle Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
S. Chareonpornwattana
K. V. Thara
L. Wang
S. Muthukrishnan
S. K. Datta
W. Panbangred
Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
description The inheritance and expression of a transgene locus consisting of multiple copies of a rice chitinase gene under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter was studied in the T3and T4generations of a transformed line that expressed the chitinase at a high level. All T3progeny of a homozygous T2parent expressed the chitinase constitutively at 3 weeks after germination, but a proportion of the progeny had undetectable levels of chitinase 8 weeks after germination, indicating silencing of the transgene. Transgene silencing was also observed among progeny of a hemizygous parent. However, we did not observe chitinase gene silencing among progeny of another homozygous line that expressed the transgenic chitinase at a five- to tenfold lower level. Thus, expression level, rather than copy number, of the transgene appears to be critical for silencing. Silencing was observed in the leaf, sheath, and root tissues of the plant, indicating that it is not restricted to specific tissues. Silencing was first observed in the youngest leaves and only later in the oldest leaves of the same plant. There was co-silencing of the selectable marker gene, hpt, which is also driven by the CaMV 35S promoter. Unlike the two transgenes (chitinase and marker), the resident homologous chitinase gene with seed-specific expression and two nonhomologous chitinase genes induced in the leaves upon pathogen infection were not silenced. The silent phenotype was inherited in the T4generation plants, while progeny of expressing plants exhibited silencing. The chitinase transgene appeared intact, and no evidence for gross alterations or methylation of CCGG sites was found. The silent phenotype could not be reversed by treatment with 5-azacytidine. Northern blot analysis and nuclear run-on transcription studies indicated that silencing occurred at the transcriptional level. The implications of transgene silencing in genetic engineering of monocot plants for disease resistance are discussed.
author2 Kansas State University
author_facet Kansas State University
S. Chareonpornwattana
K. V. Thara
L. Wang
S. Muthukrishnan
S. K. Datta
W. Panbangred
format Article
author S. Chareonpornwattana
K. V. Thara
L. Wang
S. Muthukrishnan
S. K. Datta
W. Panbangred
author_sort S. Chareonpornwattana
title Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
title_short Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
title_full Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
title_fullStr Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
title_full_unstemmed Inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
title_sort inheritance, expression, and silencing of a chitinase transgene in rice
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25312
_version_ 1763495537791729664