Abstract

Using a modified TAIL-PCR technique, the 5'-flanking regions of the phenylalanine ammonia lyase (Pal) genes of a yam species, Dioscorea bulbifera, and the phosphoglucose isomerase (Pgi) gene of D. tokoro were successfully isolated. Two novel modifications of the TAIL-PCR procedure introduced here, namely (1) the use of a battery of random 10-mers (RAPD primers) as short arbitrary primers, and (2) the use of a total of five nested, gene-specific primers, allow the rapid isolation of the 5'-flanking region of any gene from organisms with large genomes. Isolated 5'-flanking regions were fused to the gus gene, and tested for transient expression in tobacco BY2 cells. All the isolated 5'-flanking regions were shown to drive reporter gene expression. Three Pal promoters responded to salicylic acid, presumably as a result of the binding of a MYB transcriptional activator to the multiple MREs (Myb Recognition Elements) present in these regions.

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