Abstract

Transgenic cotton was developed using two constructs containing a truncated and codon-modified cry1Ac gene (1,848 bp), which was originally characterized from Bacillus thuringiensis subspecies kurstaki strain HD73 that encodes a toxin highly effective against many lepidopteran pests. In Construct I, the cry1Ac gene was cloned under FMVde, a strong constitutively expressing promoter, to express the encoded protein in the cytoplasm. In Construct II, the encoded protein was directed to the plastids using a transit peptide taken from the cotton rbcSIb gene. Genetic transformation experiments with Construct I resulted in a single copy insertion event in which the Cry1Ac protein expression level was 2–2.5 times greater than in the Bacillus thuringiensis cotton event Mon 531, which is currently used in varieties and hybrids grown extensively in India and elsewhere. Another high expression event was selected from transgenics developed with Construct II. The Cry protein expression resulting from this event was observed only in the green plant parts. No transgenic protein expression was observed in the non-green parts, including roots, seeds and non-green floral tissues. Thus, leucoplasts may lack the mechanism to allow entry of a protein tagged with the transit peptide from a protein that is only synthesized in tissues containing mature plastids. Combining the two events through sexual crossing led to near additive levels of the toxin at 4–5 times the level currently used in the field. The two high expression events and their combination will allow for effective resistance management against lepidopteran insect pests, particularly Helicoverpa armigera, using a high dosage strategy.

Highlights

  • Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) is an important fiber crop that is grown extensively in many parts of the world

  • The cry1Ac gene used for developing transgenics was synthesized by overlapping oligos and recursive PCR in the lab [31], and its nucleotide sequence is different from the cry1Ab-cry1Ac fusion gene [32] present in the event Mon 531, which has been deployed worldwide

  • The much subscribed to strategy for delaying resistance development is ‘High dosage/Refuge’ [10, 11, 24]

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Summary

Introduction

Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) is an important fiber crop that is grown extensively in many parts of the world. Apart from providing very valuable fiber, cotton seed is used as a source of edible oil and seed cake, which is used as animal feed. In 2014, ~37 million hectares of land was PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0158603. High Expression of Cry1Ac Protein in Cotton (Gossypium hirsute) no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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