Abstract

Transient expression of the maize anthocyanin regulatory elements,R andC1, was used to optimise parameters for microprojectile-mediated delivery of DNA into sugarcane embryogenic callus. Osmotic treatment of target tissues and particle acceleration in a high-pressure helium pulse increased the frequency of transient expression to 5–8×103 cells per bombardment, with minimal tissue damage. An average of 0.34% of transiently expressing cells developed into stably transformed, anthocyanin-pigmented proembryoids which subsequently regenerated into plantlets. However, constitutive expression ofR andC1 proved deleterious, and no anthocyanin-pigmented plant survived beyond 3 cm in height. We also compared selective subculture of callus portions showing luciferase activity with antibiotic selection on medium containing G418 or phosphinothricin, upon bombardment of callus with constructs driving strong expression ofluc, aphA orbar genes. Selective subculture based on luciferase activity enabled recovery of 1.4±0.5 independent transgenic plants per bombardment, compared to 19.8±3.7 independent transgenic plants per bombardment from an optimised G418 selection regimen, and no transformed plants from phosphinothricin selection. Whenluc andaphA on separate plasmids were coprecipitated onto microprojectiles before bombardment, 67–79% of callus lines selected for G418 resistance also showed luciferase activity detectable under a low-light camera. Southern analysis confirmed a very high cotransformation frequency, with variable copy numbers of introduced genes. The high efficiencies of gene transfer, selection and cotransformation in the optimised system, coupled with the simple initiation and regeneration of embryogenic callus, provide an effective tool for practical genetic transformation of sugarcane.

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