Mol. Cells 2006; 21(3): 401-410
Published online January 1, 1970
© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology
The plastid transformation approach offers a number of unique advantages, including high-level transgene expression, multi-gene engineering, transgene containment, and a lack of gene silencing and position effects. The extension of plastid transformation technology to monocotyledonous cereal crops, including rice, bears great promise for the improvement of agronomic traits, and the efficient production of pharmaceutical or nutritional enhancement. Here, we report a promising step towards stable plastid transformation in rice. We produced fertile transplastomic rice plants and demonstrated transmission of the plastid-expressed green fluorescent protein (GFP) and aminoglycoside 3?adenylyltransferase genes to the progeny of these plants. Transgenic chloroplasts were determined to have stably expressed the GFP, which was confirmed by both confocal microscopy and Western blot analyses. Although the produced rice plastid transformants were found to be heteroplastomic, and the transformation efficiency requires further improvement, this study has established a variety of parameters for the use of plastid transformation technology in cereal crops.
Keywords Cereal Crop; Chloroplast Genome; Monocotyledonous Plant Species; Plastid Transformation; Rice
Mol. Cells 2006; 21(3): 401-410
Published online June 30, 2006
Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.
Sa Mi Lee, Kyungsu Kang, Hyungsup Chung, Soon Hee Yoo, Xiang Ming Xu, Seung-Bum Lee, Jong-Joo Cheong, Henry Daniell, Minkyun Kim
The plastid transformation approach offers a number of unique advantages, including high-level transgene expression, multi-gene engineering, transgene containment, and a lack of gene silencing and position effects. The extension of plastid transformation technology to monocotyledonous cereal crops, including rice, bears great promise for the improvement of agronomic traits, and the efficient production of pharmaceutical or nutritional enhancement. Here, we report a promising step towards stable plastid transformation in rice. We produced fertile transplastomic rice plants and demonstrated transmission of the plastid-expressed green fluorescent protein (GFP) and aminoglycoside 3?adenylyltransferase genes to the progeny of these plants. Transgenic chloroplasts were determined to have stably expressed the GFP, which was confirmed by both confocal microscopy and Western blot analyses. Although the produced rice plastid transformants were found to be heteroplastomic, and the transformation efficiency requires further improvement, this study has established a variety of parameters for the use of plastid transformation technology in cereal crops.
Keywords: Cereal Crop, Chloroplast Genome, Monocotyledonous Plant Species, Plastid Transformation, Rice