A one-time inducible transposon for creating knockout mutants
Author(s) -
Kuan-Te Li,
Ya-Lin Lin,
Jiying Huang,
Wenya Li,
Yuh-Chyang Charng
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
molecular breeding
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.833
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1572-9788
pISSN - 1380-3743
DOI - 10.1007/s11032-008-9158-6
Subject(s) - transposase , transposable element , biology , transposition (logic) , genetics , gene knockout , sleeping beauty transposon system , mutant , gene , p element , genetically modified rice , transgene , transposon mutagenesis , gene silencing , genetically modified crops , linguistics , philosophy
The maize transposon Ac can move to a new location within the genome to create knockout mutants in transgenic plants. In rice, Ac transposon is very active but sometimes undergoes further transposition and leaves an empty mutated gene. Therefore, we developed a one-time transposon system by locating one end of the transposon in the intron of the Ac transposase gene, which is under the control of the inducible promoter (PR-1a). Treatment with salicylic acid induced transposition of this transposon, COYA, leading to transposase gene breakage in exons. The progeny plants inheriting the transposition events become stable knockout mutants, because no functional transposase could be yielded. The behavior of COYA was analyzed in single-copy transgenic rice plants. We determined the expression of the modified transposase gene and its ability to trigger transposition events in transgenic rice plants. The COYA element thus exhibits potential for development of an inducible transposon system suitable for gene isolation in heterologous plant species.
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