Abstract

The coding region of the yeast mevalonate kinase gene (ERG12), under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter, has been inserted in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Paraguay Bell) using an Agrobacterium tumefaciens binary vector system. Integration and expression of the ERG12 chimaeric gene was demonstrated in several independent transformants in which specific mevalonate kinase (MK) activity in young plantlets was increased by about 60% on average. The expression of this MK gene was accompanied by phenotypical modifications, such as acceleration of regenerating processes, lateral bud growth, and peculiar flowering behaviour. A higher chlorophyll content all along the plant development, paralleled by an unusual starch accumulation in the leaves of young plantlets and, later, in roots of full-grown plants, was also detected. Overexpression of the MK gene led also to a stronger inhibition of cytokinin-induced plant growth by methyl jasmonate in transgenic plants. All these events may be interpreted as a possible modification of the hormonal balance in transgenic tobaccos.

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