Jones j dg; Jones Da; Bishop Gj; Harrison K; Carroll bj; 1993
- Authors: Jones j dg; Jones Da; Bishop Gj; Harrison K; Carroll bj;
scofield sr
- Title: Use of the maize transposons activator and dissociation to show
that phosphinothricin and spectinomycin resistance genes act
non-cell-autonomously in tobacco and tomato seedlings.
- Location: Transgenic research, 2 (2). 1993. 63-78.
- Abstract: cell-autonomous genes have been used to monitor the excision of
both endogenous transposons in maize and Antirrhinum, and
transposons introduced into transgenic plants. in tobacco and
arabidopsis, the streptomycin phosphotransferase (spt) gene reveals
somatic excision of the maize transposon activator (ac) as green
sectors on a white background in cotyledons of seedlings germinated
in the presence of streptomycin. cotyledons of tomato seedlings
germinated on streptomycin-containing medium do not bleach,
suggesting that a different assay for transposon excision in tomato
is desirable. we have tested the use of the spectinomycin
resistance (spec) gene (aada) and a basta resistance (bar) gene
(phosphinothricin acetyltransferase, or pat) for monitoring somatic
excision of ac in tobacco and tomato. both genetic and molecular
studies demonstrate that genotypically variegated individuals that
carry clones of cells from which ac or ds have excised from either
spec or bar genes, can be phenotypically completely resistant to
the corresponding antibiotic. this demonstrates that these genes
act non-cell-autonomously, in contrast to the spt gene in tobacco.
possible reasons for this difference are discussed.
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