43 research outputs found

    Agrobacterium rhizogenes rolB gene affects photosynthesis and chlorophyll content in transgenic tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) plants

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    Insertion of Agrobacterium rhizogenes rolB gene into plant genome affects plant development, hormone balance and defence. However, beside the current research, the overall transcriptional response and gene expression of rolB as a modulator in plant is unknown. Transformed rolB tomato plant (Solanum lycopersicum L.) cultivar Tondino has been used to investigate the differential expression profile. Tomato is a well-known model organism both at the genetic and molecular level, and one of the most important commercial food crops in the world. Through the construction and characterization of a cDNA subtracted library, we have investigated the differential gene expression between transgenic clones of rolB and control tomato and have evaluated genes specifically transcribed in transgenic rolB plants. Among the selected genes, five genes encoding for chlorophyll a/b binding protein, carbonic anhydrase, cytochrome b6/f complex Fe-S subunit, potassium efflux antiporter 3, and chloroplast small heat-shock protein, all involved in chloroplast function, were identified. Measurement of photosynthesis efficiency by the level of three different photosynthetic parameters (Fv/Fm, rETR, NPQ) showed rolB significant increase in non-photochemical quenching and a, b chlorophyll content. Our results point to highlight the role of rolB on plant fitness by improving photosynthesis

    Zeetransport snijbloemen : adviezen en opvattingen van handelsbedrijven

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    Heterologous expression of the Arabidopsis etr1-1 allele inhibits the senescence of carnation flowers

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    The Arabidopsis thaliana etr1-1 allele, capable of conferring ethylene insensitivity in a heterologous host, was introduced into transgenic carnation plants. This gene was expressed under control of either its own promoter, the constitutive CaMV 35S promoter or the flower-specific petunia FBP1 promoter. In about half of the transgenic plants obtained flower senescence was delayed by at least 6 days relative to control flowers, with a maximum delay of 16 days, a 3-fold increase in vase life. These flowers did not show the petal inrolling phenotype typical of ethylene-dependent carnation flower senescence. Instead, petals remained firm and finally started to rot and decolorize. In transgenic plants with delayed flower senescence, expression of the Arabidopsis etr1-1 gene was detectable and the expression pattern followed the activity of the upstream promoter. In these flowers expression of the ACO1 gene, encoding the final enzyme in the ethylene biosynthesis pathway, ACC oxidase, was down-regulated. This indicates that the autocatalytic induction of ethylene biosynthesis, required to initiate and regulate the flower senescence process, is absent in etr1-1 transgenic plants due to dominant ethylene insensitivity. The delay in senescence observed in transgenic etr1-1 flowers was longer than in flowers pretreated with chemicals that inhibit either ethylene biosynthesis (amino-oxyacetic acid) or the ethylene response (silver thiosulfate). This may have important implications for post-harvest management of carnation flowers

    Improvement of adventitious shoot formation from carnation leaf explants

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    Transgenic carnation plants obtained by Agrobacterium tumefaciens mediated transformation of petal explants

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    Transgenic carnation plants were obtained after infection of petal explants with the supervirulent Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain AGLO. Southern blot techniques confirmed the transgenic nature of four transformed plants. The expression of the gus gene was verified in these plants by histochemical assays on selected shoots. It was very difficult to transfer the transgenic plants to the greenhouse due to vitrification and premature flowering
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