Carron tr; Robbins Mp; Morris P 1994
- Authors: Carron tr; Robbins Mp; Morris P
- Title: Genetic modification of condensed tannin biosynthesis in lotus
corniculatus: 1. heterologous antisense dihydroflavonol reductase
down-regulates tannin accumulation in "hairy root" cultures.
- Location: Theoretical and applied genetics, 87 (8). 1994. 1006-1015.
- Abstract: an antisense dihydroflavonol reductase (dfr) gene-construct made
using the cdna for dfr from Antirrhinum majus was introduced into
the genome of a series of clonal genotypes of lotus corniculatus
via agrobacterium rhizogenes. after initial screening, 17 antisense
and 11 control transformation events were analysed and tannin
levels found to be reduced in antisense root cultures. the effect
of this antisense construct, (pmaj2), which consisted of the 5'
half of the dfr cdna sequence, was compared in three different
recipient lotus genotypes. this construct effectively
down-regulated tannin biosynthesis in two of the recipient
genotypes (s33 and s50); However, This construct was relatively
ineffective in a third genotype (s41) which accumulated high levels
of condensed tannins in derived transgenic root cultures. four
pmaj2 antisense and three control lines derived from clonal
genotypes s33 and s50 were selected and studied in greater detail.
the antisense dfr construct was found to be integrated into the
genome of the antisense "hairy root" cultures, and the antisense
rna was shown to be expressed. tannin levels were much lower in
antisense roots compared to the controls and this reduction in
tannin levels was accompanied by a change in condensed tannin
subunit composition.
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