Abstract

BackgroundSomatic cell selection in plants allows the recovery of spontaneous mutants from cell cultures. When coupled with the regeneration of plants it allows an effective approach for the recovery of novel traits in plants. This study undertook somatic cell selection in the potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) cultivar ‘Iwa’ using the sulfonylurea herbicide, chlorsulfuron, as a positive selection agent.ResultsFollowing 5 days’ exposure of potato cell suspension cultures to 20 μg/l chlorsulfuron, rescue selection recovered rare potato cell colonies at a frequency of approximately one event in 2.7 × 105 of plated cells. Plants that were regenerated from these cell colonies retained resistance to chlorsulfuron and two variants were confirmed to have different independent point mutations in the acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) gene. One point mutation involved a transition of cytosine for thymine, which substituted the equivalent of Pro-197 to Ser-197 in the AHAS enzyme. The second point mutation involved a transversion of thymine to adenine, changing the equivalent of Trp-574 to Arg-574. The two independent point mutations recovered were assembled into a chimeric gene and binary vector for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of wild-type ‘Iwa’ potato. This confirmed that the mutations in the AHAS gene conferred chlorsulfuron resistance in the resulting transgenic plants.ConclusionsSomatic cell selection in potato using the sulfonylurea herbicide, chlorsulfuron, recovered resistant variants attributed to mutational events in the AHAS gene. The mutant AHAS genes recovered are therefore good candidates as selectable marker genes for intragenic transformation of potato.

Highlights

  • Somatic cell selection in plants allows the recovery of spontaneous mutants from cell cultures

  • Somatic cell selection has been used to select for resistance to sulfonylurea herbicides in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) [22] and sugarbeet (Beta vulgaris) [23, 24]. This study provides another example of successfully producing a novel trait in potato using somatic cell selection

  • Upon omission of casein hydrolysate, the toxicity of chlorsulfuron was substantially greater with no root formation observed in medium with 20 μg/l chlorsulfuron

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Summary

Introduction

Somatic cell selection in plants allows the recovery of spontaneous mutants from cell cultures. Somatic cell selection in plants applies the principles of microbial genetics to plant cell cultures In this manner a selection pressure is imposed on a large population of cultured cells so that only rare individuals with a specific phenotype are capable of survival or growth [1]. Despite this potential, somatic cell selection has generated only a few examples of novel traits in potato. The use of thaxtomin A (the pathotoxin of S. scabiei) as a selection agent on cultured cells allowed the recovery of rare resistant cell lines that could be regenerated into plants with improved resistance to common scab disease following both greenhouse and field evaluation [6, 7]

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