
Durable field resistance to wheat yellow mosaic virus in transgenic wheat containing the antisense virus polymerase gene
Author(s) -
Chen Ming,
Sun Liying,
Wu Hongya,
Chen Jiong,
Ma Youzhi,
Zhang Xiaoxiang,
Du Lipu,
Cheng Shunhe,
Zhang Boqiao,
Ye Xingguo,
Pang Junlan,
Zhang Xinmei,
Li Liancheng,
Andika Ida B.,
Chen Jianping,
Xu Huijun
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plant biotechnology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.525
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1467-7652
pISSN - 1467-7644
DOI - 10.1111/pbi.12151
Subject(s) - biology , transgene , transformation (genetics) , genetically modified crops , gene , virus , virology , genetics
Summary Wheat yellow mosaic virus ( WYMV ) has spread rapidly and causes serious yield losses in the major wheat‐growing areas in China. Because it is vectored by the fungus‐like organism P olymyxa graminis that survives for long periods in soil, it is difficult to eliminate by conventional crop management or fungicides. There is also only limited resistance in commercial cultivars. In this research, fourteen independent transgenic events were obtained by co‐transformation with the antisense NI b8 gene (the NI b replicase of WYMV ) and a selectable gene bar . Four original transgenic lines (N12, N13, N14 and N15) and an offspring line (N12‐1) showed high and durable resistance to WYMV in the field. Four resistant lines were shown to have segregated and only contain NI b8 (without bar ) by PCR and herbicide resistance testing in the later generations. Line N12‐1 showed broad‐spectrum resistance to WYMV isolates from different sites in China. After growing in the infested soil, WYMV could not be detected by tissue printing and Western blot assays of transgenic wheat. The grain yield of transgenic wheat was about 10% greater than the wild‐type susceptible control. Northern blot and small RNA deep sequencing analyses showed that there was no accumulation of small interfering RNA s targeting the NI b8 gene in transgenic wheat plants, suggesting that transgene RNA silencing, a common mechanism of virus‐derived disease resistance, is not involved in the process of WYMV resistance. This durable and broad‐spectrum resistance to WYMV in transgenic wheat will be useful for alleviating the damage caused by WYMV .