Engineering herbicide-resistant maize using chimeric RNA/DNA oligonucleotides

T Zhu, K Mettenburg, DJ Peterson, L Tagliani… - Nature …, 2000 - nature.com
T Zhu, K Mettenburg, DJ Peterson, L Tagliani, CL Baszczynski
Nature Biotechnology, 2000nature.com
Maize plants resistant to imidazolinone herbicides were engineered through targeted
modification of endogenous genes using chimeric RNA/DNA oligonucleotides. A precise
single-point mutation was introduced into genes encoding acetohydroxyacid synthase
(AHAS), at a position known to confer imidazolinone resistance. Phenotypically normal
plants from the converted events (C 0) were regenerated from resistant calli and grown to
maturity. Herbicide leaf painting confirmed the resistance phenotype in C 0 plants and …
Abstract
Maize plants resistant to imidazolinone herbicides were engineered through targeted modification of endogenous genes using chimeric RNA/DNA oligonucleotides. A precise single-point mutation was introduced into genes encoding acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS), at a position known to confer imidazolinone resistance. Phenotypically normal plants from the converted events (C 0) were regenerated from resistant calli and grown to maturity. Herbicide leaf painting confirmed the resistance phenotype in C 0 plants and demonstrated the anticipated segregation pattern in C 1 progeny. DNA cloning and sequencing of the targeted region in resistant calli and derived C 0 and C 1 plants confirmed the expected mutation. These results demonstrate that oligonucleotide-mediated gene manipulation can be applied to crop improvement. This approach does not involve genomic integration of transgenes. Since the new trait is obtained through modifying a gene within its normal chromosomal context, position effects, transgene silencing, or other concerns that arise as part of developing transgenic events are avoided.
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