Conferred resistance to Botrytis cinerea in Lilium by overexpression of the RCH10 chitinase gene
Key Message Transgenic Lilium lines have been generated by Agrobacterium -mediated transformation that have enhanced resistance to Botrytis cinerea as a consequence of ectopic expression of a rice chitinase gene . The production of ornamentals is an important global industry, with Lilium being one o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant cell reports 2015-07, Vol.34 (7), p.1201-1209 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Key Message
Transgenic
Lilium
lines have been generated by
Agrobacterium
-mediated transformation that have enhanced resistance to
Botrytis cinerea
as a consequence of ectopic expression of a rice chitinase gene
.
The production of ornamentals is an important global industry, with
Lilium
being one of the six major bulb crops in the world. The international trade in ornamentals is in the order of £60–75 billion and is expected to increase worldwide by 2–4 % per annum. The continued success of the floriculture industry depends on the introduction of new species/cultivars with major alterations in key agronomic characteristics, such as resistance to pathogens. Fungal diseases are the cause of reduced yields and marketable quality of cultivated plants, including ornamental species. The fungal pathogen
Botrytis
causes extreme economic losses to a wide range of crop species, including ornamentals such as
Lilium
.
Agrobacterium
-mediated transformation was used to develop
Lilium
oriental cv. ‘Star Gazer’ plants that ectopically overexpress the
Rice Chitinase 10
gene (
RCH10
), under control of the CaMV35S promoter. Levels of conferred resistance linked to chitinase expression were evaluated by infection with
Botrytis cinerea
; sporulation was reduced in an in vitro assay and the relative expression of the
RCH10
gene was determined by quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR. The extent of resistance to
Botrytis,
compared to that of the wild type plants, showed a direct correlation with the level of chitinase gene expression. Transgenic plants grown to flowering showed no detrimental phenotypic effects associated with transgene expression. This is the first report of
Lilium
plants with resistance to
Botrytis cinerea
generated by a transgenic approach. |
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ISSN: | 0721-7714 1432-203X |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00299-015-1778-9 |