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Ribozymes Targeted to Stearoyl–ACP Δ9 Desaturase mRNA Produce Heritable Increases of Stearic Acid in Transgenic Maize Leaves
Author(s) -
Ann Owens Merlo,
N. M. Cowen,
T.A. Delate,
Brent V. Edington,
Otto Folkerts,
Nicole Hopkins,
Christine Lemeiux,
Tom Skokut,
Kelley Smith,
Aaron Woosley,
Yajing Yang,
Scott Young,
Michael G. Zwick
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.10.10.1603
Subject(s) - ribozyme , biology , gene , biochemistry , transgene , rna , gene expression , ligase ribozyme , microbiology and biotechnology
Ribozymes are RNAs that can be designed to catalyze the specific cleavage or ligation of target RNAs. We have explored the possibility of using ribozymes in maize to downregulate the expression of the stearoyl-acyl carrier protein (Delta9) desaturase gene. Based on site accessibility and catalytic activity, several ribozyme constructs were designed and transformed into regenerable maize lines. One of these constructs, a multimer hammerhead ribozyme linked to a selectable marker gene, was shown to increase leaf stearate in two of 13 maize lines. There were concomitant decreases in Delta9 desaturase mRNA and protein. The plants with the altered stearate phenotype were shown to express ribozyme RNA. The ribozyme-mediated trait was heritable, as evidenced by stearate increases in the leaves of the R1 plants derived from a high-stearate line. The increase in stearate correlated with the presence of the ribozyme gene. A catalytically inactive version of this ribozyme did not produce any significant effect in transgenic maize. This is evidence that ribozymes can be used to modulate the expression of endogenous genes in maize.

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