Abstract

In this study, the d-serine ammonia lyase (dsdA) gene from Escherichia coli was evaluated as a selectable marker for maize transformation. Plants are incapable of utilizing the D-form of most amino acids, and d-serine has recently been demonstrated to be phytoinhibitory to plant growth. d-Serine ammonia lyase detoxifies d-serine via a substrate-specific reaction to pyruvate, ammonia, and water. d-Serine inhibits germination of isolated maize immature embryos and growth of embryogenic callus from wild-type plants at concentrations about approx. 2–15 mM. Transgenic plants were recovered in the presence of d-serine in tissue culture media with dsdA as the selection marker at efficiencies comparable to using a mutated acetohydroxy acid synthase selection marker gene and selection in the presence of imidazolinone herbicides. Immature embryos infected with an Agrobacterium strain containing an acetohydroxy acid synthase gene construct without dsdA did not yield any transgenic events on the selection medium with 10 mM d-serine, indicating that d-serine provided selection tight enough to prevent escapes. Molecular analysis confirmed the integration of the dsdA gene into the genome of the transgenic plants. No adverse phenotypes were observed in the greenhouse, and expression of the dsdA marker had no affect on agronomic characteristics or grain yield in multi-location field trials. Seed compositional analysis demonstrated no significant differences in the contents of seed protein, starch, fatty acids, fiber, phytic acid, and free amino acids between transgenic and non-transgenic control plants. These data indicate that the dsdA gene is properly expressed in maize and the d-serine ammonia lyase (DSDA) enzyme functions appropriately to metabolize d-serine during in vitro selection. Preliminary safety assessments indicated that no adverse affects would be expected if humans were exposed to the DSDA protein in the diet from an allergenicity or toxicity perspective. The dsdA gene in combination with phytoinhibitory levels of d-serine represents a new and effective selectable marker system for maize transformation.

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