Abstract

The mutant glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase (GSA-AT) enzyme encoded by the hemL gene of the gabaculine-resistant cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC6301 strain GR6 was expressed in tobacco following Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of leaf discs. When targeted to plastids, the GR6 hemL gene product conveyed gabaculine resistance to transgenic plants. Selection using 50 and 100 µM gabaculine was shown to produce two distinct explant phenotypes: 'greens' and 'whites'. T1 progeny displayed Mendelian segregation ratios, and PCR analysis demonstrated the 'green' phenotype corresponded with the presence of the GR6 hemL gene. Furthermore, 'whites' could be rescued after 9 days growth on solid media containing between 5 µM and 25 µM gabaculine, allowing the potential use of this system for the isolation of gabaculine-sensitive transformants in mutagenesis screening. The use of GR6 hemL as a selectable marker gene provides a novel enzyme-based method for the selection of transgenic regenerants without the need for antibiotic-resistance markers.

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