Abstract
When Daucus carota L. (carrot) suspension cultures, which had been under gradual selection for increased glyphosate resistance, whre plated in glyphosate-containing medium, the populations became gradually more resistant with I 50 values about equal to the final selection concentration used in the liquid medium. Wild type cells did not grow on plates with 2 mM glyphosate, but some colonies formed after 90 days. Cells in these colonies, after growth away for the inhibitor to obtain sufficient cells, had increased glyphosate resistance and 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS) activity and usually had amplified EPSPS genes. One step selection in liquid or solidified medium with 10 mM glyphosate was not successful. However, in liquid medium with 2 mM glyphosate, the cell viability decreased to about 30% by 30 days and then increased as growth became evident. Kinetic analysis indicates that at least 0.8% of the cells grow. The growth rate seen when the cells are subjected to a gradual selection scheme, where glyphosate was about doubled at each step, also indicates that a high proportion of the original population survives to form the new population. These results indicate that the gene amplification which causes the glyphosate tolerance in carrot cell cultures is a gradual and relatively stable process that occurs in a relatively high proportion of the cell population.
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