Abstract

Phosphinothricin is a non-selective herbicide which inhibits glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) activity causing an overaccumulation of ammonia in higher plants. Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L) shoot tissue and petiole-derived callus exposed to phosphinothricin show 50 and 70% reductions, respectively, in glutamine synthetase activity with a concomitant rise of 10 and 20 fold, respectively, in endogenous ammonia. The diffusibility of ammonia may limit the use of a detoxifying gene, phosphinothricin acetyltransferase, as a selectable marker for alfalfa transformation. However, the addition of up to 40 times the standard levels of ammonium nitrate to the culture media used in this study had no effect on callus growth, although glutamine synthetase activity was inhibited by 50% and endogenous ammonia increased 27 fold. Therefore, ammonia accumulation may not be the primary cause of cell death in alfalfa after exposure to phosphinothricin. It follows that diffusion of ammonia from cell to cell would not restrict the selection for phosphinothricin acetyltransferase transformed cells, thereby indicating that this enzyme could be used as a selectable marker in transformation experiments.

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