AU5600299A - Regeneration and transformation of cotton - Google Patents
Regeneration and transformation of cotton Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- AU5600299A AU5600299A AU56002/99A AU5600299A AU5600299A AU 5600299 A AU5600299 A AU 5600299A AU 56002/99 A AU56002/99 A AU 56002/99A AU 5600299 A AU5600299 A AU 5600299A AU 5600299 A AU5600299 A AU 5600299A
- Authority
- AU
- Australia
- Prior art keywords
- cotton
- gene
- cell
- plant
- medium
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Abandoned
Links
Landscapes
- Breeding Of Plants And Reproduction By Means Of Culturing (AREA)
Description
1
AUSTRALIA
Patents Act 1990 Mycogen Corporation
ORIGINAL
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION STANDARD PATENT r r r c r Invention Title: Regeneration and transformation of cotton The following statement is a full description of this invention including the best method of performing it known to us:- 1A REGENERATION AND TRANSFORMATION OF COTTON The present application is a divisional of AU 64247/96, which is a divisional of AU 35284/93, which is a divisional of AU 29266/89. The entire contents of these related applications are incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention is directed to plant regeneration and transformation of cotton, particularly cotton of the species Gossvpium hirsutum L.
In recent years many tissues of diverse origin from plants belonging to different taxonomic groups have been established as in vitro tissue culture.
Some of the factors controlling growth and differentiation of such cultures have also been determined. The establishment of subtle interactions among 15 the different groups of plant hormones, and plant growth regulators operating either directly or indirectly, alone or in synergistic combination, have given to some degree an insight into certain interrelationships that may exist among cells, tissues and organs. The information is however by no means complete.
For some time it has been known that plant cell culture can be maintained in a nondifferentiating proliferative state indefinitely. It has, however, only been recently found that redifferentiation of tissues, organs or whole plant organisms can be experimentally induced. Since the demonstrations by Skoog et al "Chemical regulation of growth and organ formation in plant tissues cultured in vitro," Symp. Soc. Exp. Biol. 11:18-130, a a a -2- 1 1958, incorporated herein by reference, that the relative ratio of a cytokinin to an auxin determines the nature of organogenesis in tobacco pith tissue. Reorganization or regeneration from callus cultures includes the formation of shoot primordia or embryos, both of which ultimately lead to plantlet development in vitro.
The tendency for organogenesis vs. embryogenesis still depends upon the species involved and the presence of certain triggering factors which are chemical and/or, physical in nature.
In 1902, Haberlandt "Kulturversuche mit isolierten pflanzenzellen," Mat. KI. El A Ald Wiss. in 111:62, incorporated herein by reference, postulated that plant S" cells possessed the ability to produce entire plants and 15 predicted that this would someday be demonstrable in cell cultures. In 1965, Reinert "Untersuchungen uber die morphogenese an Gewebekulturen," fier. fEs S: 71:15, and Steward et al, "Growth and organized development of cultured cells/II. Organization in cultures grown 20 from freely suspended cells," Am. t. 45:705-708, working independently, confirmed the occurrence of in vitro somatic embryogenesis. Both references are incorporated herein by reference. In experimentally manipulating somatic embryogenesis it is believed that two components of the culture media, an auxin and the nitrogen source, play crucial roles.
It has also been shown that the process of somatic embryogenesis takes place in two stages: first, the induction of cells with .embryogenic competence in the presence of a high concentration of auxin; and second, the development of embryonic cell masses into embryos in the absence of or at a low concentration of auxin.
The induction of organogenesis or embryogenesis leads to distinct structural patterns in the callus.
Detailed study of several plant species has enabled -3- 1 certain generalizations to be made about the developmental pathways leading to shoot, bud or embryo development.
The application of tissue culture techniques to'the regeneration of plants via organogenesis or embryogenesis remains perhaps the most important contribution of basic studies in morphogenesis to commercial application.
Beasley reported the formation of callus in ovule cultures of cotton in 1971, "In vitro culture of fertilized cotton ovules," Biosi.ence 21:906:907, 1971,. incorporated herein by reference. Later, Hsu et al "Callus induction by (2-chlorethyl) phosphonic (CPA) acid in, cultured cotton ovules," Phsiol. Plant 36:150-153, 1976, incorporated herein by reference, observed a stimulation of growth of calli obtained from ovules due 15 to the addition of CPA and gibberellic acid to the medium.
Callus cultures from other explants such as leaf ^Davis et al., "In vitro culture of callus tissues and cell suspensions from okra (Hibiscus sculentus) and cotton (Gossvipiu hirsutum)," In vitro 9:395-398, 1974, 20 both incorporated herein by reference; hypocotyl •Schenk et al. "Medium and technique for induction and growth of monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plant cell cultures," Can. I. Bot. 50:199-204, 1972, incorporated herein by reference; and cotyledons Rani et al.
"Establishment of Tissue Cultures of Cotton," Plant Lett. 7:163-169, 1976, incorporated herein by reference) have been established for osspium hirsutum and f.
arboreuw.
Katterman et al, "The influence of a strong reducing agent upon initiation of callus from the germinating seedlings of gosspium barbadense," Physiol. flant 40:98- 101, 1977, incorporated herein by reference, observed that the compact callus from cotyledons of fi. barbadense formed roots, and in one instance regeneration of a complete plant was also obtained. Smith et al "Defined -4- 1 conditions for the initiation and growth of cotton callus in vitro, GUp4im arboreum," In vitro 13:329-334, 1977, incorporated herein by reference, determined conditions for initiation and subculture of hypocotylderived callus of Q. arboreum. Subsequently, Price et al "Callus cultures of six species of cotton (Goosyniu L) on defined media," 21Scl. 8:115-119, 1977, and "Tissue culture of G.ium species and its potential in cotton genetics and crop improvement," 1twide Cotton Prodcion Resrarch conference pp. 51-55, 1977, of the National Cotton Council, Memphis, each incorporated herein by reference, defined conditions for the initiation and subculture of callus from five species of G.
One of the common problems in establishing cultures of many plant species is the "browning" of the explant in the culture medium. In cotton, this leaching of polyphenols was overcome by replacing sucrose with glucose, and by transferring the cultures to a fresh medium every days. After 3 or 4 passages on glucose supplemented 20 medium, the browning completely disappeared and the cultures could be transferred back to sucrose-supplemented media. Although difficulties with the induction, browning and maintenance of calli during subcultures have been overcome with certain po1ypium species, all attempts to regenerate plants from callus cultures have been either unsuccessful or have involved several timeconsuming steps. Davidonis and Hamilton "Plant Regeneration from Callus Tissue of GossvDium hirsutum." L. Plnt Sol. Lett. 32:89-93, 1983, incorporated herein by reference, reported the eventual formation of embryos two years after the initiation of culture.
Although many growth substances, such as natural phytohormones and synthetic growth regulating compounds have been utilized in tissue culture media to bring about plant regeneration n yitr, no generalization, much less specifics, of the effects of different substances on plant regeneration has been arrived at. Indeed, the same substances, when applied to different plant species, may either inhibit growth, enhance growth, or have no effect whatsoever. Therefore, aside from certain standard procedures, it remains necessarily a difficult task to arrive at a working protocol for plant regeneration for any new species and by many orders of magnitude a more difficult task to achieve plant transformation.
The present invention provides a method for the rapid regeneration of cotton plants from segments exercised from seedlings. The method described offers a high degree of repeatability and reliability and it enables genetic transformation of cotton plants.
Summary of the Invention The present invention also provides a method for transforming cotton **which includes the steps of a) providing a cotton explant; b) culturing the cotton explant in a first solid callus growth medium containing glucose as a carbon source from a period of time sufficient for phenolic secretion from the explant forming the callus to end and for undifferentiated callus to develop from the explant; transferring the callus at the end of phenolic 25 secretions to a second solid callus growth medium containing sucrose as the carbon source; d) culturing the callus in the second solid callus growth medium from a period of item sufficient to allow development of embryogenetic callus providing at least one embryo; e) transferring the embryo to a plant germination medium; wherein the transformation involves exposing the explant during regeneration to an Agrobacterium vector containing an expressible gene sequence foreign to cotton for a time sufficient for the gene to transfer to the plant cells.
The present invention also provides a vector for conferring antibiotic resistance to a cotton plant which comprises two T-DNA right border sequences from A.
Tumefaciens capable of integration with the plant genome flanking a chimeric gene capable of expression in cotton and of conferring resistance to the antibiotics Kanamycin and G418.
The present invention also provides a vector for transforming cotton comprising: integration sequences for integrating into the genome of cotton plants; a cotton plant expressible promoter for promoting 15 transcription in cotton plants; a DNA border sequence encoding a selectable marker *wherein the selectable marker is a herbicide resistance gene; and a cotton plant expressible termination signal for terminating transcription in cotton plants.
Seed is sterilised and grown in the dark to a seedling. The seedling is one source of an explant, usually the hypocotyl and the cotyledon. Another source are immature zygotic embryos of developing fruit. The 25 explant is subdivided and cultured in a first callus growth medium (containing glucose) for a period of time to allow a callus to develop from the explant on a culture medium which copes with phenolic secretions and stimulates cells of the explant to divide and proliferate. The callus, after passing through the phenolic secretion stage, is transferred to a fresh callus growth medium (containing sucrose) which develops the callus to an embryogenetic callus. The embryo may then be subcultured to produce more embryogenetic callus or transferred to another growth medium (plant germination medium) and cultured for a period of time sufficient to develop a -6- 1 plantlet which after another period of growth is transferred to a greenhouse, then into the field and grown to a mature plant from which seeds can be harvested.
The embryos may also be cultured in suspension. In this procedure, after the period of growth, the embryo containing embryogenic clumps greater than about 600 microns, preferably greater than about 80o microns in size are isolated and utilized for plant production.
Smaller callus are recycled to the callus growth medium for growth to plant forming callus or maintained as an embryos source.
emb: Transformation may occur at the explant, callus or suspension development stage. Transformation involves exposing the explant, callus and/or embryogenic callus to the action of an Agrobacterium vector containing an expressible gene sequence foreign to cotton for a time sufficient for the gene to transfer into the cells. The residual Agrobacterium is then killed off with an antibiotic which is toxic to the Agrobacterium This is 20 followed by selection of the tra no ns formed embryogenic callus for development into transformed plantlets. In suspension culture, transformation and/or selection can occur prior to or following separation of embryogenic callus from cells and callus too immature to be embrydgenic.
Plants of unique phenotypic traits are obtainable, and there is provided new cotton plants which having resistance to antibotics normally inhibitory to plant cell growth; cotton plants which have increased resistance or tolerance to herbicides, fungal pathogens and cotton plants which exhibit better yield and improved fiber quality.
-7- 1 Brief Description of the Drawines FIG. 1 presents diagramatically preferred procedures for development of cotton plants from seed by tissue culture techniques with a showing of establishing zones of transformation.
FIG. 2 is a photo illustration of embryogenic callus of cotton with somatic embryos (12) at various stages of development including leaf (14) and root (16).
FIG. 3 is a photo illustration of a somatic cotton' embryo at a late globular stage isolated to form the embryogenic callus culture as depicted in FIG. 2.
FIG. 4, as with reference to FIG. 2, is a photo illustration of embryos and young plantlets (18) of cotton developing on an embryo germination medium.
S 15 FIG. 5 is a photo illustration of small clumps of embryogenic cells from suspension cultures of cotton.
FIG. 6 is a photo illustration of a globular stage embryo from a suspension culture.
FIG. 7 illustrates germinating embryos obtained 20 from suspension cultures showing emerging leaves (14) and roots (16).
FIG. 8 illustrates the development of plantlets of cotton growing on the embryo germination medium.
FIGS. 9 to 15 depict the genetic transformation of cotton, with FlG. 9 showing the development of cell colonies (20) from transformed cotton cells containing a gene for kanamycin resistance.
FIt. 10 shows somatic embryos developing from the selected antibiotic resistance cells of FIG. 9 on alq antibiotic-supplemented medium.
FIG. 11 shows germinating embryos of transformed somatic embryos containing a gene confering resistance to the herbicide glyphosate.
FIG. 12 shows cotton plantlets developed from the embryos of FIG. 11.
-8- 1 FIG. 13 shows germinating somatic embryos transformed to confer resistance to Lepidopterous insects with leaf 14 and root 16 development.
FIG. 14 shows plantlets developed from the embryos of FIG. 13.
FIG. 15 shows a plantlet of the variety Siokra developed from transformed embryos exhibiting a resistance to kanamycin.
FIG. 16 shows the construction of mp 19/bt, a plasmid containing the 5' end of the Bt protoxin gene.
FIG. 17 shows the construction of mp 19/bt ca/del, a plasmid containing the CaMV gene VI promotor fused to the 5' end of Bt protoxin coding sequence.
FIG. 18 shows the construction of p702/bt, a plasmid having the 3' coding region of the protoxin fused to the CaMV transcription termination signals.
FIG. 19 shows the construction of pBR322/bt 14, containing the complete protoxin coding sequence flanked by CaMV promotor and terminator sequences.
20 FIG. 20 shows the construction of pRK252/Tn903/BglII.
FIG. 21 shows FIGS. 22 23 FIG. 24 shows FIG. 25 shows host range plasmid plant selection.
FIG. 26 shows FIG. 27 shows FIG. 28 shows FIG. 29 shows the construction of PCIB shows the construction of pCIB 4.
the construction of pCIB 2.
the construction of pCIB 10, a broad containing T-DNA borders and gene for the the the the construction of pCIB10/19Sbt.
construction of pCIB 710.
construction of pCIB10/710.
construction of pCIB10/35Sbt.
FIG.
FIG.
FIG.
30 shows the construction of pCIB10//35Sbt(KpnI).
31 shows the construction of pCIB10/35Sbt(BclI).
32 shows the construction of pCIB10/35Sbt(607) FIG. 33 depicts the plasmid prom 1 containing a T-DNA right border sequence (rb) and a nopaline synthase gene (nos) from the wild-type A. tumefaciens strain C58, was digested with Hind I and Sal I The fragment containing the right border sequence was cloned into pBR322 to generate pProm 1 and this construction was digested with Cla I Plasmid pCon 1, containing a marker gene (nos/npt II) that allows selection of plant transformants on medium containing kanamycin, was digested with Hind m (4) and the restriction fragments generated from pCon 1 and pProm 1 were treated with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) and "blunt-end" ligated to obtain promcon 1 The last cloning steps (6 and 7) involved the Eco RI digestion and ligation of promcon 1 and pRK290. The plasmid pRK290 contains a wide host replicon required for replication in A. tumefaciens. The final binary vector construction (DEI) contains a unique Hind III cloning suit and the selectable marker gene between two T-DNA right border sequences. Restriction sites: H, 15 Hind II; S, Sal I; E, Eco RI; C, Cla I; Co, Cla I (Klenow filled).
FIG. 34 is a photo showing a field trial made up of cotton regenerants planted in a Verticillium infested field.
4 FIG. 35 is a photo showing progeny of a regenerated SJ4 plant in the field trial show in FIG. 33. A somaclonal variant with improved tolerance to Verticillium fungus is indicated by the arrow.
1 Detailed Description The present invention is directed to the regeneration by tissue culture of cotton plants particularly plants of the genus Gossvium hirsutum from somatic cells for propagation in the field. Optionally, the cells may be transformed to include foreign genetic information.
The various growth medium useful in accordance with this invention are as follows: .0 SEED GERMINATION GROWTH MEDIUM COMPOSITION OF MODIFIED WHITE'S STOCK SOLUTION (Phytomorphology 11:109-127, 1961 incorporated herein by reference) Concentration per Component 1000 ml. Comments eo S S MgSO4.7 H 2 0 Na 2
SO
4 NaH 2
PO
4
.H
2 0 3.6 2.0 1.65 Dissolve and make up the final volume to 1000 ml., Label White's A Stock. Use 100 ml/1 of final medium.
Ca(NO 3 2 .4 H 2 0
KNO
3 KCl 25 Na 2 MoO 4 2H 2 0 CoC12.6H 2 0 MnSO4.H 2 0 ZnSO 4 .7 H 2 0.
CuSO 4 .5 H 2 0
H
3 B0 3 Fe EDTA 2.6 800 650 2.5 2.5 300 50 2.5 g Dissolve and make up mg the final volume to mg 1000 ml. Label white's B Stock. Use 100 ml/1 of final medium.
Dissolve and make up the final volume to 100 ml. Label White's C Stock. Use 1.0 ml/l of final medium.
Use 10 ml/l of MSFe
EDTA.
Organic Use 10 ml/i of MS organic.
-11- CALLUS GROWTH/MAINTENANCE MEDIUM COMPOSITION OF MURASHIGE SKOOG (MS) STOCK SOLUTIONS (Physiol. Plant 15:473-497, 1962 indorporated herein by reference) Concentration per 1000 ml.
of Stock Component 0 0*ee
*SS*
06 0000 6* 0 0*4
S
S. *t 5 500000 0 0* 0 0S
S.
NH
4
NO
3
KNO
CaC1 2 2 H 2 0 MgSO 4 .7 H 2 0 KH2PO 4
KI
15
H
3
BO
3 MnSO 4
H
2 0 ZnSo 4 .7 H 2 0 Na 2 MoO 4 .2 H 2 0 CuSO 4 5 H 2 0 CoC1 2 .6 H 2 0 Nicqtinic acid Pyridoxin HC1 Thiamine HC1 41.26 47.50 11.00 9.25 4.25 83 620 1690 860 25 2.5 2.5 9 g 9 mg g Ig mg mg mg mg mg mg Dissolve 3nd make up the final volume to 1000 ml. Use 40 ml/1 of final medium.
Dissolve and make up the final volume to 1000 ml. Label MSI- Minor. Use 10 ml/1 of final medium.
50 mg Dissolve and make up 50 mg the final volume to 10 mg 1000 ml. Label MS Oraanic. Freeze in ml aliquots. Use ml/l of final medium.
-12- Fe EDTA FS S0 4 .7H 2 0 Na 2 EDTA.2 H120 Thiamine HCl 2.78 q 3.73 g Dissolve 2.78 9 of FeSO 4 .7 H20 in abot 200 ml of deionized water. Dissolve 3.73 g of Na 2 EDTA.2 H120 (disodium salt of ethylenediaminotetraacetic acid dihydrato) in 200 al of deionized water in another beaker.
Heat the Na 2
EDTA
solution on a hot plate for about minutes. While constantly stirring, add FeSO 4 solution to Na 2 EDTA solution.
Cool the solution to room temperature and make up the volume to 1000 ml. Label ?1M ZM Cover bottle with foil and store in refrigerator. Use mill of final medium.
50 mg Dissolve and make up the volume to 500 ml.
Label MS Thiamine.
Use 4.0 mll of final medium.
As if required.
Inositol Glycine 10 9 0.2 g Dissolve and make up the final volume to 1000 ml. Label MSi...
clvcine/inositol. Use mi/i of final medium.
-13- PLANT GERMINATION MEDIUM COMPOSITION OF BEASLEY AND TING'S STOCK SOLUTION..
(Am. J. Bot. 60:130-139, 1973 incorporated herein by reference) Concentration per 1000 al. Component 0 o
KH
2
PO
4 1 H 3 B0 3 1 Na 2 MoO4.2 H20 CaC1 2 .2 H20
KI
CoC12.6 H20 MgS0 4 .7 H20 MnSO 4
.H
2 0 ZnS04.7 H 2 0 CuSO 4 .5 H 2 0
KNO
3 2.72 61.83 2.42 4.41 8.3 0.24 4.93 169.02 86.27 0.25 25.275 g Dissolve and make up the volume to 100 ml.
Label B&T A Stock.
Use 10 ml/1 of final medium.
Dissolve and make up the volume to 100 ml.
Label B&T B Stock.
Use 10 ml/i of final medium.
Dissolve and make up the volume to 100 ml.
Label B&T Stock.
Use 10 ml/1 of final medium.
Dissolve and make up the volume to 200 ml.
Label B&T D Stock.
Use 40 ml/l of final medium.
Dissolve and make up the final volume to 100 ml. Label B&T Oraanics. Use 10 ml/l of final medium.
Use 10 ml/l of MS Fe
EDTA.
100 mg/i of final medium.
1200.6 mg/l of final medium.
Nicotinic acid Pyridoxin HCL Thiamine HCL Fe EDTA 4.92 8.22 13.49 Inositol NH4NO3 (15 UM) -14- 1 With any of the above solutions, the following, procedure is used to prepare one liter of the medium.
There is provided as a base, 200 ml of deionized water and the various stock solutions are added in the amounts stated for 1 liter. For example, if there is to be employed 10 ml of a stock in the final medium, then ml of the stock are added to the 200 ml of the distilled water. To ensure the salts stay in solution, stock solutions are normally added in the order shown in the formulations above. After thoroughly mixing additional deionized water is added to the mixture to bring it to, as required 500 ml, and the mixture adjusted in pH to a value. of from about 5.8 to 6.0. The final volume is brought to 1,000 ml and there is normally added tissue 15 culture Agar, or its equivalent to a level of about 0.8% by weight. This is to provide some solidity to solution to reduce flow. The mixture is then autoclaved for about 5 to 20 minutes at a pressure 15-21 Ibs/in 2 to kill any contaminating organism, and suitably labeled and stored as a sterile medium.
:Briefly, cotton seeds are sterilized and germinated on a suitable seed germination medium such as a basal agar medium in the dark for a time sufficient to produce seedlings. The normal period of growth is up to about 4 weeks, typically 7 to 14 days.
Segments of explants are excised from the seedling.
It is preferred that the explant come from the hypocotyl or cotyledon. In the alternative, one can equally use immature embryos obtained from the developing fruits of greenhouse or field grown cotton plants as the explant.
The explant segments are cultured on a suitable first callus growth medium, preferably a or full Murashige and Skoog (MS) nutrient medium containing glucose. Growth occurs by culturing at a temperature of from about 25 to about 35*C in a light/dark cycle of about 16 hours of 1 light and above 8 hours of dark. Culturing is the procedure whereby the medium is replaced at periodic intervals as the nutrients are consumed and continued for approximately about 3 to about 4 weeks, or until undifferentiated callus are formed. The callus are transferred to a second callus growth medium, preferably an MS medium supplemented with naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) and sucrose as the carbon source and cultured for three to four months to produce embryos.
10 The embryos may then be maintained in the second a callus growth medium to maintain an embryo supply or transferred to a plant germination medium such as Beasley and Ting's medium preferably containing casein hydrolysate and source of ammonuim cultured for 2 to 3 weeks to :15 produce plantlets.
'The plantlets are transferred to soil under high humidity conditions, then transplanted to larger pots in a greenhouse and finally transferred to the field for growth to maturity.
The methods briefly described herein have been successfully employed to induce somatic embryo formation e in cotton of the species Gossv2ium hirsutum by tissue and suspension cultures and, ultimately, to obtain mature plants from hypocotyl and cotyledon derived callus cultures of Acala varieties of Gossypium hirsutum including SJ2, SJ4, SJ5, B1644, B1810, B2724, GC510 and Cl and non Acala "picker" Siokra and "stripper" variety FC 2017.
Cultures have been transformed to normal plants with novel traits or properties.
More particularly, the procedure involves first the sterilizing of the cotton seeds. Suitable sterilization may be achieved by immersing the seeds in 95% ethanol for 2 to 3 minutes, rinsing in sterile water one or more -16- 1 times, then soaking the seeds in a 15% solution of sodium hypochlorite for 15 to 20 minutes, and rinsing several times with sterile water.
The sterilized seeds are then transferred to a first. medium, termed a seed germination medium. A seed germination medium is one of normal salt content. A suitable germination medium is a basal agar medium, including White's medium or half-strength MS medium.
(One-half ingredient strength). Germination normally occurs in the dark over an about 12 to about 14 day period.
Hypocotyl and/or cotyledons are preferably excised from the germinated seed, subdivided or cut into segments and cultured on a first callus growth medium such as an 15 MS medium supplemented with growth substances. The presently preferred medium is the MS medium supplemented with about 0.4 mg/1 thiamine hydrochloride, about 30 g/l glucose, about 2 mg/1 naphthaleneacetic acid, about 1 mg/l kinetin, a common growth regulator, and about 100 mg/1 inositol and agar. Thiamine hydrochloride can generally range in concentration from 0.1 to about mg/l, glucose about 20 to about 30 g/l, about 1 to about mg/l naphthaleneacetic acid, about 1 to about 2 mg/1 kinetin and about 50 to about 100 mg/l inositol.
25 The cultures are maintained at a temperature of about 25 to about 35'C, preferably about 30*C and with a light/dark cycle of about 16 hours of light and about 8 Shours of dark. It is preferred to have a light intensity of about 2000 to 4000 lux, more preferably about 3000 to 4000 lux.
The calli formed are periodically subcultured at 3 to 4 week intervals and transferred to a fresh first callus growth medium. In the culturing of the explants, secretions of phenolic compounds from the explants can occur as evidenced by darkening of the cultured medium. In -17- 1 this instance, the medium is changed more regularly.
Darkening has been avoided by changing the culture medium every 10 days. Normally, after three to five medium changes, phenolic secretions will disappear. When this occurs, the first callus growth medium can be replaced by fresh callus growth medium containing sucrose or supplemented with sucrose as a carbon source.
After 3 to 4 weeks of culture, active calli develop on the cut surfaces of the explants. The calli are then transferred to a fresh second callus growth maintenance medium which is preferably an MS medium combined with about 1 to about 10 mg/l, preferably about 1 to about mg/1 NAA. Cytokinin is employed at a concentration of from 0 to about 1 g/l. A callus growth medium is characterized as a high salt content medium containingas much as 10 times more salt than the seed germination medium. The essential difference between first and second callus growth medium is the carbon source. Glucose is used during 'period of phenolic secretions. Sucrose is used when secretion have stopped. The balance of the callus growth medium can remain the same or changed.
The calli are transferred in regular intervals to a fresh callus growth medium and, after generally about to 7 passages or until an anthocyanin pigmentation becomes 25 evident in a portion of the calli, which is followed by development of a yellowish-white embryogenic callus.
The embryogenic callus are then selectively Ssubcultured and maintained by regular subculturing. The Sembryogenic callus contain somatic embryos at various stages of development. Some may have reached the point of development that enables growth into small plantlets.
Most, however, require further development. Some may be advanced to germination. Other may be maintained as a source of embryos for future use.
-18- 1 With reference to FIG. 2, there is illustrated this stage of development showing calli of Acala cotton with somatic embryos 12 of differing size with some having emerging leaves 14 and roots 16. FIG. 3 illustrates a somatic embryo isolated at a late globular stage.
With reference to FIG. 4, further development may be achieved by transferring the somatic embryos to a third growth medium termed herein an embryo germination medium, a medium rich in nitrogen usually in the form of ammonia or its equivalent. Suitable media include Beasley and Ting's medium, preferably supplemented with up to about 500 mg/l casein hydrolysate.
Germination occurs from somatic embryos and, within 2 to 3 weeks, a well developed plantlet 18 of up to 6 leaves and good root system is generally formed.
At this stage, the plantlets are transferred to soil in small clumps and grown in a standard incubator under conditions of high humidity. Temperature is normally .:maintained at about 25 to 30'C (See Fig. 7).
After a period of growth, the small plants are transferred to larger pots in a greenhouse and thereafter transferred to field and grown to maturity. All the regenerated plants are preferably self-pollinated either while growing in the green house or in field conditions 25 and the seeds collected. Seeds are then germinated and 4 to 5 week old seedlings transferred to the field for progeny row trials and other standard plant breeding procedures. Practicing the above procedure produces viable cotton plants from about 35% of the explants in the period of time from about 6 to about 8 months.
Proliferation of Embryogenic Cotton Cells In Suspension Cultures As an alternative to allowing the growing embryogenic calli to be developed into a plant, the callus may be cut -19- 1 into smaller pieces and further developed using suspension culture techniques.
In this procedure, suspension concentration is normally from about 750 to 1000 mg of callus parts to 8 ml. callus growth medium such as the second callus growth medium (MS medium supplemented with NAA), and allowed to grow in suspension. In a preferred embodiment, the suspension of -the callus is inserted in T-tubes and placed on a roller drum rotating at about 1.5 rpm under a light regime of about 16 hours of light and about 8 hours of dark. Growth is for about 3 to 4 weeks.
After about every 3 to 4 weeks, the suspension is filtered to remove large cell clumps of embryogenic callus depicted in groups in FIG. 5 and as isolated at late .15 globular stages as shown in FIG. 6. The filtrate is returned to a nutrient medium for a 3 to 4 week period of growth. This procedure is repeated over and over with harvesting of large clumps at about 3 to 4 week intervals, at which time the medium is supplanted in whole or in 20 part with fresh callus growth medium. Preferably, about 4 volumes or more of the fresh medium are added to about S* one volume of residual suspension. It is presently preferred that the filter employed have a mesh size greater than about 600 microns, preferably greater than 25 800 microns, as it has been observed the cell masses of a particle size less than 600 microns will not develop into plants, whereas cell masses greater than 600 microns and preferably greater than 800 microns have undergone sufficient differentiation so as to become embryogenic and capable of developing into viable plants.
Suspension cultures can also be initiated by transferring of embryogenic calli to a flask, such as a DeLong or Erlenmeyer flask, containing the liquid embryo growth medium in an amount of about 20 ml of MS and NAA at a concentration of 2.0 mg/l. The flask is placed on a 1 gyrotory shaker and is shaken at about 100-110 strokes per minute. After 3 to 4 weeks the suspension is suitable for filtration as described above to remove the large cell clumps for plant development.
More typically, after the third or fourth subculture, the cell suspension from the tube or De Long or Erlenmeyer flask is plated onto agar-solidified
MS
medium containing NAA (2.0 mg/1) or Beasley Ting's medium containing casein hydrolysate (500 mg/1) media and a source of nitrbgen. Within 3-4 weeks embryogenic calli with developing embryos become visible. Likewise, the larger cell clumps when plated on the above media give rise to embryogenic clumps with developing embryos.
S. In both suspension growth methods, the MS media is 15 used to promote and/or sustain embryos whereas the germination medium is employed for rapid plant development.
The seedling explants, if desired, can be transformed.
In this procedure, cotyledon and/or hypocotyl segments of the sterilized seed can be used. Cotyledons are preferred.
The segments are placed in a medium containing an Agrobacterium vector containing a code (genetic marker) .such as resistance to an antibiotic, such as for instance kanamycin for a time sufficient for the vector to transfer the gene to the cells of the explant. Generally, contact 25 times ranging from 1 minute to 24 hours may be used and may be accompanied with intermittent or gentle agitation.
The explants are then removed and placed on agar-solidified callus growth medium such as a MS medium supplemented with NAA (2 mg/l) and incubated about 15 to 200 hours at 25 to 35*C, preferably 30*C, on a 16:8 hour light: dark regime.
After incubation, the explants are transferred to the same medium supplemented with the antibiotic cefotaxime preferably in a concentration of 200 mg/1. Cefotaxime is included to prevent any remaining Agrobacterium from -21- 1 proliferating and overgrowing the plant tissues.
Alternatively, the explants can be rinsed with MS medium supplemented with NAA (2mg/1) and incubated an additional 4 to 28 days before rinsing, then incubating the same medium containing cefotaxime. At the end of 4-5 weeks of culture on fresh medium, the developing callus, i.e., primary callus, is separated from the remainder of the primary explant tissue and transferred to MS medium containing NAA (2 mg/1), cefotaxime (200 mg/l) and an antibiotic such as kanamycin sulfate (50 mg/1).
Transformed primary callus, identified by virtue of its ability to grow in the presence of the antibiotic (kanamycin), is'selected and embryos developed, germinated and plants obtained following the procedure set forth 15 above.
It is also feasible to achieve transformation of a cell suspension. Following a normal subculture growth Scycle of 7 to 14 days, usually 7 to 10 days, cells are allowed to settle leaving a supernatant which is removed.
The remaining concentrated suspended cells may be centrifuged at 4000Xg for 5 minutes and the excess medium is discarded. The concentrated suspension cultures are resuspended in the 8 ml of the same medium which contains the Acrobacterium. The suspension is transferred to "T" 25 tubes and suitably agitated for incubation.
Following about 2 to 24 hours, preferably 3 to hours, of incubation to allow for bacterial attachment and DNA transfer, the suspension is removed and allowed to settle. The' supernatant containing the bacteria is discarded and the cells are washed with fresh medium.
The suspension may, if desired, be centrifuged for about minutes and the supernatant removed. In either event, the cells are resuspended in the same medium and transferred to a tube or flask and suspension subculture resumed. The object is to minimize the amount of unattached Agrobacterium vector left in the cell suspension.
-22- After about 15 to about 200 hours, typically 15 to 1 about 72 hours, preferably 18 to 20 hours, the suspension is filtered to remove large clumps and washed with fresh liquid medium and allowed to settle. The suspension is resuspended in the fresh liquid medium containing cefotaxime (200 mg/l) plated on a solidified medium in Petri dishes.
Alternatively, the suspension may be resuspended in fresh medium, containing cefotaxime and allowed to grow an additional 4 to 28 days prior plating on solidified medium in Petri dishes. Cell concentration is 1 vol. of suspension cells plus 3 vol. of medium with cefotaxime.
Kanamycin at 10 to 300 mg/l preferably about 20 to 200 mg/1 more preferably about 40 to 80 mg/l is included in the medium for selection of transformed cells expressing 15 the neomycin phosphotransferase (NPT) gene. Cells and embryos proliferating in the selective concentration of kanamycin are further grown as set forth above to mature somatic embryos capable of germinating and regenerating Sinto whole plants according to the procedures described 20 herein.
Using the above procedure and with reference t6 FIG. 9, there is shown variable cell colonies which is consequence of transformation. There exists cotton cells 20 exhibiting resistance to the antibiotic kanamycin.
25 With reference to FIG. 10, transformed calli are shown developing into somatic embryos on an antibiotic MS medium. FIG. 11 shows transformed somatic embryos established to have kanamycin resistance and transformed 30: to have resistance to the herbicide glyphosate. FIG. 12 shows plants from the embryos of FIG. 11. FIG. 13 shows cells transformed to have resistance to lepidopterous insects growing on an MS medium and in FIG. 14 transferred to a Beasley and Ting's medium whereas FIG. shows further development of the plantlets of FIG. 14 to more mature plantlets.
-23- 1 COTTON REGENERATION Example 1 Regeneration of plants starting from cotvledon explants Seeds of Acala cotton variety SJ2 of Gossvpium hirsutum were sterilized by contact with 95% alcohol for three minutes, then twice rinsed with sterile water and immersed with a 15% solution of sodium hypochlorite for minutes, then rinsed in sterile water. Sterilized seeds were germinated on a basal agar medium in the dark for approximately 14 days to produce a seedling. The cotyledons of the seedlings were cut into segments of 2-4mm 2 which were transferred aseptically to a callus inducing medium consisting of Murashige and Skoog (MS) major and minor salts supplemented with 0.4 mg/l thiamine- HC1, 30 g/1 glucose, 2.0 mg/l naphtaleneacetic acid .0 (NAA), 1 mg/l kinetin, 100 mg/1 of m-inositol, and agar 20 The cultures were incubated at about 30*C under conditions of 16 hours light and 8 hours darkness in a Percival incubator with fluorescent lights (cool daylight) S. providing a light intensity of about 2000-4000 lux.
Calli were formed on the cultured tissue segments within 3 to 4 weeks and were white to gray-greenish in color. The calli formed were subcultured every three to four weeks onto a callus growth medium comprising MS medium containing 100 mg/1 m-inositol, 20 g/l sucrose, 2 i mg/l naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) and agar. Somatic 30 embryos formed four to six months after first placing tissue explants on a callus inducing medium. The callus and embryos were maintained on a callus growth medium by subculturing onto fresh callus growth medium every three to four weeks.
-24- 1 Somatic embryos which formed on tissue pieces were explanted either to fresh callus growth medium, or to Beasley Ting's medium (embryo germination medium).
The somatic plantlets which were formed from somatic embryos were transferred onto Beasley and Ting's medium which contained 1200 mg/1 ammonium nitrate and 500 mg/1 casein hydrolysate as an organic nitrogen source. The medium was solidified by a solidifying agent (Gelrite) and plantlets were placed in Magenta boxes.
The somatic embryos developed into plantlets within about three months. The plantlets were rooted with six to eight leaves and about three to four inches tall and were transferred to soil and maintained in an incubator under high humidity for three to four weeks and then 15 transferred to a greenhouse. After hardening, plants were also transferred to open tilled soil.
Example 2 The procedure of Example 1 was repeated using instead half-strength MS medium in which all medium components have been reduced to one-half the specified concentration.
Essentially the same results were obtained.
Examle 3 The procedures of Examples 1 and 2 were repeated except that the explant was the hypocotyl segments. The same results were obtained.
Example 4 The procedure of Examples 1 and 2 were repeated except that the explant was the immature zygotic embryo.
Essentially the same results were obtained.
1 Example The procedure of Examples 1 and 2 was repeated with Acala cotton varieties SJ4, SJ5, SJ2C-1, GC510, B1644, B 2724, B1810, the picker variety Siokra and the stripper variety FC2017. All were successfully regenerated.
Examole _6 The procedure of Example 1 was repeated to the extent of obtaining callus capable of forming somatic embryos. Pieces of about 750-1000 mg of actively growing embryogenic callus was suspended in 8 ml units of liquid suspension culture medium comprised of MS major and 15 minor salts, supplemented with 0.4 mg/l thiamine HC1, g/l sucrose, 100 mg/l of inositol and naphthaleneacetic acid (2 mg/l) in T-tubes and placed on a roller drum rotating at 1.5 rpm under 16:8 light:dark regime. Light .intensity of about 2000-4500 lux was again provided by fluorescent lights (cool daylight).
After four weeks, the suspension was filtered through an 840 micron size nylon mesh to remove larger cell clumps. The. fraction smaller than 840 microns were allowed to settle, washed once with about 20-25 ml of 25 fresh suspension culture medium. This suspension was transferred to T-tubes (2 ml per tube) and each tube diluted with 6 ml of fresh suspension culture medium.
The cultures were maintained by repeating the above procedure at 10-12 day intervals. Namely, the suspension was filtered and only the fraction containing cell aggregates smaller than 840 microns was transferred to fresh suspension culture medium. In all instances, the fraction containing cell clumps larger than 840 microns was placed onto the callus growth medium to obtain mature somatic embryos.
-26- 1 The somatic embryos that were formed on callus growth medium were removed and transferred to embryo germination medium and using the protocol of Example 1 were germinated, developed into plantlets and then field grown plants.
Example 7 The procedure of Example 6 was repeated except that suspension cultures were formed by transferring 750-1000 mg of embryogenic calli to a DeLong flask containing ml of the MS liquid medium containing 2 mg/l NAA.
The culture containing flask was placed on a gyrotory shaker and shaken at 100-110 strokes/minute. After three weeks the suspension was filtered through an 840 15 micron nylon mesh to remove the large cell clumps for plant growth, as in Example 4. The less than 840 micron suspension was allowed to settle, washed once in the MS liquid medium and resuspended in 2 to 5 ml of the MS liquid medium. The suspension was subcultured by transfer to fresh medium in a DeLong flask containing 1-2 ml of suspension and 15 ml of fresh MS liquid medium. The cultures are maintained by repeating this procedure at seven to ten day intervals. At each subculture only the less than 840 micron' suspension was subcultured and the 25 large clumps (840 microns or greater) were used for plant growth.
Example 30 After three or four subcultures using the suspension growth procedure of Examples 6 and 7, 1.5 to 2.0 ml of cell suspension from the T-tube and DeLong flask were in each instance plated onto agar-solidified MS medium containing 2 mg/l NAA and Beasley Ting medium containing 500 mg/l casein hydrolysate. Within three to tour weeks -27- 1 embryogenic calli with developing embryos became visible.
Again, the 840 micron or greater cell clumps were plated on the callus growth medium giving rise to embryogehic clumps with developing embryos which ultimately grew into plants.
COTTON TRANSFORMATION Example 9 Transformation To Form Tumorous-PhenotvDe With Aarobacteria LBA 4434 An Acala cotton suspension culture was subcultured for three to four months in T-tubes with the medium (MS 15 medium containing 2 mg/1 NAA) being changed every seven to ten days. After any medium change thereafter the cells can be allowed to settle and harvested for transformation. The supernatant was removed by pipeting and cells transformed with the Agrobacterium strain LBA 4434. The Agrobacterium strain LBA 4434 is described in (Hoekema, A. et al. Nature 303: 179-180, 1983, incorporated herein by reference) contains a Ti plasmid-derived binary plant transformation system. In such binary systems, .one plasmid contains the T-DNA of a Ti-plasmid, the second plasmid contains the yir-region of a Ti-plasmid.
The two plasmids cooperate to effect plant transformation.
In the strain -LBA 4434, the T-DNA plasmid, pAL 1050, contains TL of pTiAch5, an octopine Ti-plasmid and the vji-plasmid in strain LBA 4434, pAL4404, contains the intact virulence regions of pTiAch 5 (Ooms, G. et al.
Plgasid 7:15-29, 1982, incorporated herein by referenca).
Strain LBA 4434 is available from Dr. Robert Schilperoort of the Department of Biochemistry, University of Leiden,' The Netherlands.
-28- 1 The transforming Agrobacterium strain was taken from a glycerol stock, inoculated in a small overnight culture, from which a 50-ml culture was inoculated the following day. Agrobacteria was grown on YEB medium containing per liter in water adjusted to pH 7.2 with NaOH, 5 g beef extract, 1 g yeast extract, 5 g peptone, g sucrose. After autoclaving, 1 al of 2 M MgCl 2 is added after which antibiotics, as required to kill other strains. The absorbance at 600 nm of the 50 ml overnight culture is read, the culture centrifuged and the formed pellet resuspended in the plant cell growth medium (MS medium plus NAA at 2 mg/1) to a final absorbance at 600 nm of Eight ml of this bacterial suspension of Agrobacterium S" 15 LBA 4434 was added to each T-tube containing the suspension plant cells after removal of the supernatant liquid.
The T-tube containing the plant and bacteria cells was agitated to resuspend the cells and returned to a roller drum for three hours to allow the Agrobacteria to attach to the plant cells. The cells were then allowed to settle and the residual supernatant removed. A fresh aliquot of growth medium was added to the T-tube and the suspension allowed to incubate on a roller drum for a period of 18 to 20 hours in the presence of any residual 25 Agrobacteria which remained. After this time, the cells were again allowed to settle, the supernatant removed and the cells washed twice with a solution of growth medium containing cefotaxime (200 ug/ml). After washing, the cells from each T-tube were resuspended in 10 ml growth medium containing cefotaxime (200 ug/ml in all cases) and 1 ml aliquots of the suspension plated on petri dishes.
Infected cells grew on the growth medium to which no phytohormones were added establishing the tissue had receiVed the wild-type phytohormone genes in T-DNA. The -29- 1 cells developed tumors, further indicating transformation of the cultures.
Example Transformation.of Cotton To Form a Kanamvcin-Resistant Non-Tumorous Phenotve The suspension culture as obtained in Example 9 was transformed using an Agrobacteria which contained the T- DNA containing binary vector pCIB 10. (Rothstein, S.J.
et al. fene 53: 153-161, 1987, incorporated herein by reference) as well as the pAL 4404 yir-plasmid. The T- DNA of pCIB 10 contains a chimeric gene composed of the promoter from nopaline synthase, the coding region from encoding the enzyme neomycin phosphotransferase, and 15 the terminator from nopaline synthase. The Agrobacteria containing pCIB 10 were grown on YEB medium containing kanamycin (50 ug/ml). Transformation was accomplished in the same manner as in Example 10 except that the 1 ml aliquots resulting in cells and Agrobacteria were 0' 20 immediately plated on selective media containing either kanamycin (50 ug/ml) or G418 (25 ug/ml). Expression of the nos/neo/nos chimeric gene in transformed plant tissue allows the selection of this tissue in the presence of both antibiotics. The existence in two to four weeks of 25 transformed tissue became apparent on the selection plates. Uninfected tissue as well as added control tissue showed no signs of growth, turned brown and died.
Transformed tissue grew very well in the presence of both kanamycin and G418.
At this time, tissue pieces which were growing well were subcultured to fresh selection medium. Somatic embryos formed on these tissue pieces and were explanted to fresh non-selective growth media. When the embryos began to differentiate and germinate, at the point where they were beginning to form roots and had two or 1 three leaves, they were transferred to Magenta boxes containing growth medium described in Example 1. Growth was allowed to proceed until a plantlet had six to eight leaves, at which time it was removed from the agar medium.
The plantlets were now placed in potting soil, covered with a beaker to maintain humidity and placed in a Percival incubator for four to eight weeks. At this time, the plant was removed from the beaker and transferred to a greenhouse. The plants grew in the greenhouse, 10 flowered and set seed.
Example 11 The procedure of Example 10 was followed, except that the transforming Agrobacteria used contained the T- DNA vector DEI PEP10 as well as the pAL4404 vir plasmid.
DEI PEP10, shown in Figure 33, utilizes two T-DNA PstI cleaved right border sequences from A. Tumefaciens (strain C-58) which had been further subdivided with BamHI for integration in the plant genome, a passenger maize 20 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase gene (Pepcase gene), and a chimeric gene (NOS/NPT/TK) capable of expression in plants and conferring resistance to the antibiotics kanamycin and G418. This chimeric gene utilizes a nopaline synthetase promoter, the neomycin phosphotransferase II coding region from Tn5, and the terminator from the herpes simplex virus thimidine kinase gene. Following transformation, embryogenic callus and embryos were obtained by selection on kanamycin (50 mg/1). No resistant callus was obtained from the control (non-transformed callus) plated on kanamycin at this level (50 mg/1).
Example 12 Transformation of Cotton Suspension Culture Cells To A Glvphosate-Tolerant Phenotvoe The procedure of Example 10 was followed, except that the transforming Agrobacteria used contained the T- -31- 1 DNA vector pPMG85/587 (Fillatti, J. et al., Mol Gen.
Genet. 26: 192-199, 1987, incorporated herein by reference) as well as the pAL4404 vir plasmid. the plasmid pPMG85/587 carries three chimeric genes capable of expression in plants. Two genes code for neomycin phosphotransferase (NPT) which confers resistance to the antibiotics kanamycin and G418. The third chimeric gene, containing the coding sequence from a mutant aroA gene of S. typhimurium, confers tolerance to the herbicide glyphosate (Comai, et al., Science 221: 370-371, 1983, incorporated herein by reference). The Agrobacteria containing pPMG85/587 were grown on medium containing kanamycin (100 ug/ml). Transformation is accomplished as detailed in Example 10 except that the suspension is 15 allowed to grow for 28 days at which time 1 ml aliquots.
were plated on medium containing selective antibiotics.
Expression of the NPT chimeric gene in transformed plant tissue allowed selection of this tissue on both antibiotics. In this instance the selective antibiotic 20 was kanamycin (50 ug/ml).
In two to four weeks, transformed tissue became apparent on the selection plates. Plant tissue, individual embryos and callus were then placed on growth medium ~containing the herbicide glyphosate 1mM and transformed 25 tissue continued to grow well. Extraction and analysis of the proteins of both callus and embryos confirmed the presence of the product of the glyphosate tolerance gene.
Example 13 Transformation of Cotton SusPension Culture Cells To a Hvyromvcin-Resistant Non-Tumorous Phenotvie The transformation procedure of Example 10 was followed except there was used as the transforming Agrobacteria one containing the T-DNA binary vector pCIB -32- 1 715 (Rothstein, S. J. et al. Gene 53: 153-161, 1987) as well as the yxj plasmid. The T-DNA of pCIB 715 contains a chimeric gene composed of the promoter and terminator from the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S transcript (Odell et al, Nature Al: 810-812, 1985, incorporated herein by reference) and the coding sequence for hygromycin B phosphotransferase (Gritz, L. and J. Davies, Gene 179-188, incorporated herein by reference). Agrobacteria containing pCIB 715 was grown on YEB containing kanamycin (50 ug/ml).
Transformation was accomplished as detailed in Example 10 again with the change that the 1 ml aliquots were plated immediately on medium containing as the selective antibiotic 50 ug/ml hygromycin. Expression of 15 the chimeric hygromycin gene in transformed plant tissue allows the selection of this tissue on the medium containing hygromycin. Transformed tissue was grown in the manner described in Example 8 on the selection growth medium establishing transformation had occurred.
Examnple 14 Transformation of Cotton SusDension Culture Cells To Confer Resistance To LepidoDteran Insects The procedure of Example 10 was followed except where 25 changes are noted below. Different transforming Agrobacteria were used. Also, after plant tissue was selected on an antibiotic for the selection of transformed material, it was further selected for expression of the BT gene as defined herein.
The Agrobacteria used contained the T-DNA vector (Rothstein et al, Gene 53:153-161 (198) incorporated herein by reference into which had been inserted the following chimeric Bacillus thurinciensis endotoxin genes ("BT Genes"): -33- 1 To prepare the Agrobacterium vector there was fused the CaMV gene VI promotor and protoxin coding sequences.
A derivative of phage vector mpl9 (Yanish-Perron et al., 1985) was first constructed. The steps are shown 'in FIGS. 16 and 17. First, a DNA fragment containing approximately 155 nucelotides 5' to the protoxin coding region and the adjacent approximately 1346 nucleotides of coding sequence are inserted into mpl9. Phage mpl9 ds rf (double-stranded replicative form) DNA was digested with restriction endonucleases SacI and SmaI and the approximately 7.2-kbp vector fragment was purified after electrophoresis through low-gelling temperature agarose by standard procedures. Plasmid pKU25/4, containing approximately -10 kbP (kilobase pairs) of Bacillus 15 thuringiensis DNA, including the protoxin gene, was obtained from Dr. J. Nueesch, CIBA-Geigy Ltd., Basle, Switzerland. The nucleotide sequence of the protoxin gene present in plasmid pkU25/4 is shown in Formula 1 below. Plasmid pKU25/4 DNA was digested with endonucleases HpaI and SacI, and a 1503 bp fragment containing nucleotides 2 to 1505 of Formula 1 and purified. This fragment contains approximately 155 bp of bacteria promotor sequences and approximately 1346 bp of the start of the oeo protoxin coding sequence. Approximately 100 ng of each 25 fragment is then mixed, T4 DNA ligase added, and incubated at 15*C overnight. The resulting mixture was transformed into E. coli strain HB 101, mixed with indicator bacteria E. coli JM 101 and plated. One phage (mpl9/bt) was used for further construction below.
Next, a fragment of DNA containing the CaMV gene VI promotor, and some of the coding sequences for gene VI, was inserted into mpl9/bt. Phage mpl9/bt ds rf DNA is digested with BamHI, treated with the large fragment of DNA polymerase to create flush ends and recleaved with endocuclease PstI. The larger vector fragment was purified -34- 1 by electrophoresis as described above. Plasmid pABD1 is S described in Paszkowski et al., EMBO J. 3, 2717-2722, (1984) incporated herein by reference. Plasmid pABDI DNA is digested with PstI and HindIII. The fragment approiimately 465 bp long containing the CaMV gene VI promotor and approximately 75 bp of gene VI coding sequende was purified. The two fragments were ligated and plated as described above. One of the resulting recombinant phages, mpl9/btca contained the CaMV gene VI promotor 10 sequences, a portion of the gene VI coding sequence, approximately 155 bp of Bacillus thuringiensis DNA upstream of the protoxin coding sequence, and approximately 1346 bp of the protoxin coding sequence. To fuse the CaMV promotor sequences precisely to the protoxin coding sequenes, the intervening DNA was deleted using oligionicleotide-directed mutagensis of mpl9/btca DNA.
•A DNA oligonucleotide with the sequence TTCGGATTGTTATCCATGGTTGGAGGTCTGA was synthesized by routine procedures using an Applied Biosystems DNA 20 Synthesizer. This oligonucleotide is complimentary to those sequences in phage mpl9/btca DNA at the 3' end of the CaMV promotor (nucleotides 5762 to 5778 in Hohn, Current Topics, in Microbiology and Immunology, 62, 193- 235 (1982) incorporate herein by reference and the beginning of the protoxin coding sequence (nucleotides 156 to 172 in formula I above). The general procedure for the mutagensis is that described in Zoller and Smith, Meth, Enzym., 10 468-500 (1983) incorporated herein by reference. Approximately five micrograms of single-standed phage mpl9/btca DNA was mixed with 0.3 mg of phosphorylated oligonucleotide in a volume of 40 ul. The mixture was heated to 65'C for 5 min, cooled to 50*C, and slowly cooled to 4*C. Next, buffer, nucleotide triphosphates, ATP, T 4 DNA ligase and large fragment of DNA polymerase were added and incubated overnight at 15*C as described 1 [Zoller and Smith Meth. Enzym., 19, 468-500 (1983)] incorporated herein by reference. After agarose gel electrophoresis, circular double-stranded DNA was purified and transfected into E. coli strain JM101. The resulting plaques are screened for sequences that hybridize with 32P-labeled oligonucleotide, and phage are analyzed by DNA restriction endonuclease analysis. Among the resulting phage clones were ones which have correctly deleted the unwanted sequences between the CaMV gene VI promotor ahd 10 the protoxin coding sequence. This phage is called pl9/btca/del (see FIG. 17).
Next, a plasmid was constructed in which the 3' coding region of the protoxin gene was fused to CaMV transcription termination signals. The steps are shown in FIG. 18.
15 First, plasmid pABDI DNA was digested with endonucleases BamHI and BglII and a 0.5 kbp fragment containing the CaMV transcription terminator sequences isolated. Next plasmid pUC19, Yanisch-Perron et al., Gene, 103-119 (1985) incorporated herein by reference was digested 20 with BamHI, mixed with the 0.5 kbp fragment and incubated with T 4 DNA ligase. After transformation of the DNA into E. coli strain HB101, one of the resulting clones, called plasmid p702, was obtained which has the structure shown in FIG. 18. Next, plasmid p702 DNA was cleaved with endonucleases SacI and SmaI, and the larger, approximately 3.2 kbp fragment isolated by gel electrophoresis. Plasmid pKU25/4 DNA was digested with endonucleases AhaIII and SacI, and the 2.3-kbp fragment (nucleotides 1502 to 3773 of Formula 1) containing the 3' portion of the protoxin coding sequence (nt 1504 to 3773) was isolated after gel electrophoresis. These two DNA fragments are mixed, incubated with T 4 DNA ligase and transformed into E. coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid was p702/bt (FIG. 18).
-36- 1 Finally, portions of phage mpl9/btca/del ds rf DNA and plasmid p702/bt were joined to create a plasmid containing the complete protoxin coding sequence flanked by CaMV promoter and terminator sequences (see FIG. 18).
Phage mpl9/btca/del DNA was digested with endonucleases SacI and SphI, and a fragment of approx. 1.75 kbp is purified following agarose gel electrophoresis. Similarly, plasmid p702/bt DNA is digested with endonucleases Sac and SalI and a fragment of approximately 2.5 kbp is 10 isolated. Finally, plasmid pBR 322 DNA (Bolivar et al., Gene, 2, 95-113 (1977) incorporated herein by reference was digested with SalI and SphI and the larger 4.2-kbp :fragment isolated. All three DNA fragments were mixed and incubated with T4 DNA ligase and transformed into E.
15 coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid, PBR322/btl4 is a derivative of PBR322 containing the CaMV gene VI promoter and translation start signals fused to the Bacillus thuringiensis crystal protein coding sequence, followed by CaMV transcription termination signals (shown 20 in FIG. 19).
The vector pCIB10 is a Ti-plasmid-derived vector useful for transfer of the chimeric gene to plants via Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The vector is derived from the broad host range plasmid pRK 252, which may be obtained S" 25 from Dr. W. Barnes, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. The vector also contains a gene for kanamycin resistance in Agrobacterium, from Tn903, and left and right T-DNA border sequences from the Ti plasmid pTiT37.
Between the border sequences are the polylinker region from the plasmid pUC18 and a chimeric gene that confers kanamycin resistance in plants.
First, plasmid pRK252 was modified to replace the gene conferring tetracycline-resistance with one conferring resistance to kanamycin from the transposon Tn90 3 (Oka, et al., J. Mol. Biol., 147, 217-226 (1981) incorporated -37- 1 herein by reference], and was also modified by replacing the unique EcoRI site in pRK252 with a BglII site (see FIG. 20 for a summary of these modifications). Plasmid pRK252 was first digested with endonucleases Sall and SmaI, then treated with the large fragment of DNA polymerase I to create flush ends, and the large vector fragment purified by agarose gel electrophoresis. Next, plasmid p368 was digested with endonuclease BamHI, treated with the large fragment of DNA polymerase, and an 10 approximately 1050-bp fragment isolated after agarose .gel electrophoresis; this fragment containing the gene from transposon Tn903 which confers resistance to the antibiotic kanamycin [Oka et al., J. Mol. Biol., 142, 217-226 (1981) incorporated herein by reference]. Both fragments were then treated with the large fragment of DNA* polymerase to create flush ends. Both fragments are mixed and incubated with T4 DNA ligase overnight at After transformation into E. coli strain HB101 and selection for kanamycin resistant colonies, plasmid pRK252/Tn903 is obtained (see FIG. 19).
Plasmid pRK252/Tn903 was digested at its EcoRI site, followed by treatment with the large fragment of E. coli DNA polymerase to create flush ends. This fragment was added to synthetic BglII restriction site linkers, and incubated overnight with T 4 DNA ligase. The resulting DNA was digested with an excess of BglII restriction endonuclease and the larger vector fragment purified by agarose gel electrophoresis. The resulting fragment was again incubated with T4 DNA ligase to recircularize the fragment via its newly-added BglII cohesive ends.
Following transformation into E. coli strain HB101, plasmid pRK252/Tn903/BglII is obtained (see FIG. A derivative of plasmid pBR322 was constructed which contains the Ti plasmid T-DNA borders, the polylinker region of plasmid pUC19, and the selectable gene for -38- 1 kanamycin resistance in plants (see FIG. 21). Plasmid pBR325/Eco29 contains the 1.5-kbp EcoRI fragment from the nopaline Ti plasmid pTiT37. This fragment contains the T-DNA left border sequence; Yadav et al., Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 79, 6322-6326 (1982) incorporated herein by reference. To replace the EcoRI ends of this fragment with HindIII ends, plasmid pBR325/Eco29 DNA was digested with EcoRI, then incubated with nuclease S1, followed by incubation with the large fragment of DNA 10 polymerase to create flush ends, then mixed with synthetic HindIII linkers and incubated with T4 DNA ligase. The resulting DNA was digested with endonucleases Clal and an excess of HindIII, and the resulting 1.1-kbp fragment containing the T-DNA left border purified by gel electrophoresis. Next, the polylinker region of plasmid pUC19 was isolated by digestion of the plasmid DNA with endonucleases EcoRI and HindIII and the smaller fragment (approx. 53 bp) isolated by agarose gel electrophoresis.
Next, plasmid pBR322 was digested with endonucleases 20 EcoRI and Clal, mixed with the other two isolated fragments, incubated with T4 DNA ligase and transformed into E. coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid, contains the polylinker and T-DNA left border in a derivative of plasmid pBR322 (see FIG. 21).
A plasmid containing the gene for expression of kanamycin resistance in plants was constructed (see FIGS. 22 and 23). Plasmid Bin6 obtained from Dr. M.
Bevan, Plant Breeding Institute, Cambridge, UK. This plasmid is described in .the reference by Bevan, Nucl.
Acids Res., 12, 8711-8721 (1984) incorporate herein by reference. Plasmid Bin6 DNA was digested with EcoRI and HindIII and the fragment approximately 1.5 kbp in size containing the chimeric neomycin phosphotransferase (NPT) gene is isolated and purified following agarose gel electrophoresis. This fragment was then mixed with plasmid -39- 1 pUC18 DNA which had been cleaved with endonucleases EcoRI and HindIII. Following incubation with T4 DNA ligase, the resulting DNA was transformed into E. cbli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid is called pUC18/neo.
This plasmid DNA containing an unwanted BamHI recognition sequence between the neomycin phosphotransferase gene and the terminator sequence for nopaline synthase; see Bevan, Nucl. Acids Res., 12, 8711-8721 (1984) incorporated ;herein by reference. To remove this recognition sequence, plasmid pUC18/neo was digested with endonuclease BamHI, .followed by treatment with the large fragment of DNA :e polymerase to create flush ends. The fragment was then incubated with T4 DNA ligase to recircularize the fragment, and transformed into E. coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid, pUC18/neo(Bam) has lost the BamHI recognition sequence.
The T-DNA right border sequence was then added next to the chimeric NPT gene (see FIG. 24). Plasmid .pBR325/Hind23 contains the 3.4-kbp HindIII fragment of 20 plasmid pTiT37. This fragment contains the right T-DNA border sequence; Bevan et al., Nucl, Acids Res., 11, 369-385 incorporated herein by reference. Plasmid pBR325/Hind23 DNA was cleaved with endonucleases SacII and HindIII, and a 1.0 kbp fragment containing the right border isolated and purified following agarose gel electrophoresis. Plasmid pUC18/neo(Bam) DNA was digested with endonucleases SacII and HindIII and the 4.0 kbp vector fragment isolated by agarose gel electrophoresis.
The two fragments were mixed, incubated with T4 DNA ligase and transformed into E. coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid, pCIB4 (shown in FIG. 23), contains the T-DNA right border and the plant-selectable marker for kanamycin resistance in a derivative of plasmid pUC18.
Next, a plasmid was constructed which contains both the T-DNA left and right borders, with the plant selectable 1 kanamycin-resistance gene and the polylinker of pUC18 between the borders (see FIG. 28). Plasmid pCIB4 DNA was digested with endonuclease HindIII, followed 'by treatment with the large fragment of DNA polymerase to create flush ends, followed by digestion with endonuclease EcoRI. The 2.6-kbp fragment containing the chimeric kanamycin-resistance gene and the right border ot T-DNA was isolated by agarose gel electrophoresis. Plasmid pCIB5 DNA was digested with endonuclease AatII, treated S. 10 with T4 DNA polymerase to create flush ends, then cleaved with endonuclease EcoRI. The larger vector fragment was purified by agarose gel electrophoresis, mixed with the pCIB4 fragment, incubated with T4 DNA ligase, and transformed into E. coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid, pCIB2 (shown in FIG. 24) is a derivative of plasmic pBR322 containing the desired sequences between the two T-DNA borders.
The following steps complete construction of the .vectok pCIB10, and are shown in FIG. 25. Plasmid pCIB2 20 DNA was digested with endonuclease EcoRV, and synthetic linkers containing BglII recognition sites are added as described above. After digestion with an excess of BglII endonuclease, the approximately 2.6-kbp fragment was isolated after agarose gel electrophoresis. Plasmid pRK252/Tn903/BglII, described above (see FIG. 20) was digested with endonuclease BglII and then treated with phosphatase to prevent recircularization. These two DNA fragments are mixed, incubated with T4 DNA ligase and transformed into E. coli strain HB101. The resulting plasmid is the completed vector, Insertion of the chimeric protoxin gene into vector is by the steps shown in FIG. 26. Plasmid pBR322/btl4 DNA was digested with endonucleasas PvuI and Sall, and then partially digested with endonuclease BamHI. A BamHI-SalI fragment approx. 4.2 kbp in size, -41- 1 containing the chimeric gene, was isolated following agarose gel electrophoresis, and mixed with plasmid DNA which had been digested with endonucleases BamHI and Sail. After incubation with T4 DNA ligase and transformation into E. Coli strain HB101, plasmid shown in FIG. 26 and contained the chimeric protoxin gene in the plasmid vector pCIB0O.
In order to transfer plasmid pCIB10/19Sbt from E.
coli HB101 to Agrobacterium, an intermediate E. coli 10 host strain S17-1 was used. This strain, obtainable from Agrigenetics Research Corp., Boulder, Co. contains mobilization functions that transfer plasmid directly to Agrobacterium via conjugation, thus avoiding the necessity to transform naked plasmid DNA directly 15 into Agrobacterium (reference for strain S17-1 is Simon .e.t al., "Molecular Genetics of the Bacteria-Plant Interaction", 'A Puhler, ed, Springer Verlag, Berlin, pages 98-106, 1983, incorporated herein by reference).
First, plasmid pCIB10/19Sbt DNA is introduced into calcium 20 chloride-treated S17-1 cells. Next, cultures of transformed S17-1 cells and Agrobacteriuam tumefaciens strain LBA4404 [Ooms at al., Gene, 33-50 (1981) incorporated herein by reference] were mixed and mated on an N agar (Difco) plate overnight at room temperature.
A loopful of the resulting bacteria are streaked onto AB minimal media; Chilton et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA, 22, 7347-7351 (1974), incorporated herein by reference, plated with 50ug/ml kanamycin and incubated at 28*C. Colonies were restreaked onto the same media, then restreaked onto NB agar plates. Slow-growing colonies were picked, restreaked onto AB minimal media with kanamycin and single colonies isolated. This procedure selects for .'Agrobacteria containing the pCIB10/19SBt plasmid.
-42- Construction of a Bacillus thuringiensis protoxin 1 chimeric gene with the CaMV 35S promoter was achieved by construction of a CaMV 35S Promoter Cassette Plasmid pCIB710 was constructed as shown in FIG. 27. This plasmid contained CaMV promoter and transcription termination sequences for the 35S RNA transcript [Covey, S.N., Lomonossoff, G.P. and Hull, Nucleic Acids Research vol. 9, 6735-6747 (1981) incorporated herein by reference].
A 1149-bp BglII restriction fragment of CaMV DNA in Hohn 0* et al., Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology, *10 96, 194-220 and Appendices A to G (1982) incorporated herein by reference] was isolated from plasmid pLV111 (obtained from Dr. S. Howell Univ. California-San Diego; alternatively, the fragment can be isolated directly 1 from CaMV DNA) by preparative agarose gel electrophoresis as described earlier and mixed with BamHI-cleaved plasmid pUC19 DNA, treated with T4 DNA ligase, and transformed into E. coli. The BamHI restriction site in the resulting plasmid has been destroyed by ligation of the BglII 20 cohesive ends to the BamHI cohesive ends. The resulting plasmid, called pUC19/35S, was then used in oligonucleotide-directed in-vitro mutagensis to insert the BamHI recognition sequence GGATCC immediately SfollowingCaMV nucleotide 7483 in the Hohn reference.
The resulting plasmid, pCIB710, contains the CaMV promotor region and transcription termination region separated by a BamHI restriction site. DNA sequences inserted into this BamHI site will be expressed in plants by the CaMV transcription regulation sequences. pCIB710 does not contain any ATG translation initiation codons between the start of transcription and the BamHI site.
Insertion of the CaMV 35S promoter/Terminator Cassette into pCIB10 occurred by the steps outlined in FIG. 28.
Plasmids pCIB10 and pCIB710 DNAs were digested with EcoRI and Sall, mixed and ligated. The resulting plasmid, 3S -43- 1 pCIB10/710 has the CaMV 35S promoter/terminator cassette inserted into the plant transformation vector The CaMV 35S sequences are between the T-DNA borders in pCIBl0, and thus will be inserted into the plant genome in plant transformation.
Insertion of the Bacillus thuringiensis protoxin gene into pCIB10/710 occurred by the steps outlined in FIG.
29. As a source of the protoxin gene, plasmid pCIB10/19Sbt was digested with BamHI and NcoI, and the 3.6-kb fragment 10 containing the protoxin gene was isolated by preparative gel electrophoresis. The fragment was then mixed with :synthetic NcoI-BamHI adapter with the sequence CATGGCCGGATCCGGC-3', then digested with BamHI. This step creates BamHI cohesive ends at both ends of the protoxin fragment. This fragment was then inserted into BamHI-cleaved pCIB10/710. The resulting plasmid, pCIB10/35Sbt, shown in FIG. 29, contains the protoxin gene between the CaMV 35S promoter and transcription termination sequences.
20 Transfer of the plasmid pCIB10/35Sbt into Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain LBA4404 was as described above.
Construction of a deleted Bacillus thuringiensis protoxin gene containing approximately 725 amino acids, and construction of a chimeric gene containing this deleted gene with the CaMV .35S promoter was made by removing the COOH-terminal portion of the gene by cleaving at the KpnI restriction endonuclease site at position 2325 in the sequence shown in Formula 1. Plasmid pCIB10/35Sbt (FIG. 29) was digested with BamHI and KpnI, and the approximately 2.2-kbp BamHI/KpnI fragment containing the deleted protoxin gene isolated by preparative agarose gel electrophoresis. To convert the KpnI site at the 3' end to a BamHI site, the fragment was mixed with a KpnI/BamHI adapter oligonucleotide and -44- 1 ligated. This fragment is then mixed with BamHI-cleaved pCIB10/710 (FIG. 28).
A deleted protoxin gene containing approximately 645 amino acids was made by removing the COOH-terminal portion of the gene by cleaving at the Bcll restriction endonuclese site at position 2090 in the sequence shown in Formula 1. Plasmid pCIB10/35Sbt (FIG. 29) was digested with BamHI and Bcll, and the approximately 1.9-kbp BamHI/BcII fragment containing the deleted protoxin gene 10 isolated by reprarative agarose gel electrophoresis.
oo Since BclI creates a cohesive end compatible with BamHI, no further manipulation is required prior to ligating this fragment 'into BamHI-cleaved pCIB10/710 (FIG. 28).
The resulting plasmid, which has the structure pCIB10/35Sbt(BclI) shown in FIG. 31 was selected on kanamycin.
The resulting transformants, designated pCIB10/35Sbt(KpnI) and shown in FIG. 30, contain the deleted protoxin gene of approximately 725 amino acids.
20 These transformants are selected on kanamycin.
A deleted protoxin gene was made by introducing a BamHI cleavage site (GGATCC). This is done by cloning S" the BamHI fragment containing the protoxin sequence from pCIB10/35Sbt into mpl8, and using standard oligonucleotide mutagensis procedures described above. After mutagensis, double-stranded replicative form DNA is prepared from the M13 clone, which is then digested with BamHI. The approximately 1.9-kbp fragment containing the deleted protoxin gene is inserted into BamHI-cleaved pCIBO0/710.
The resulting plasmid, which the structure pCIB10/35Sbt(607) shown in FIG. 32 is selected for on kanamycin.
The pCIB10/Sbt 607 was used. Transformation was accomplished as detailed in Example 7 with the change that the 1 ml aliquots were plated immediately on medium 1 containing sel'ective antibiotics. This selection medium contained kanamycin (50 ug/ml) or G418 (25 ug/ml).
Expression of the NPT chimeric gene in both transformed plant'tissue allows the selection of this tissue on either antibiotic.
In 2-4 weeks, transformed tissue became apparent on the selection plates. Plant material was selected on kanamycin or G418. Plant tissue (either individual embryos or callus) was then extracted with buffer and 10 assayed for expression of the BT gene product by ELISA assay. The conditions of extraction are as follows: per 100mg of tissue, homogenize in 0.1 ml of extraction buffer containing 50 mM NaC0 3 (pH9.5), 0.05% Triton, 0.05% Tween, 100nMNaCl, 10mM EDTA, ImM leupeptine, and 1mM PMSF. The leupeptine and PMSF are added immediately prior to use from lOOx stock solutions. The tissue was ground with a motor driven pestle. After extraction, 2M Tris pH7 was added to adjust pH to 8.0-8.5 then centrifuged at 12,000 RPM in a Beckman microfuge 12 (10 minutes at and the supernatant saved for enzyme linked immunosorbent assay ("ELISA").
ELISA techniques as a general tool is described by M. F. Clark et al in Methods in Enzvmoloav 118:742-766 (1986), incorporated by reference.
An ELISA for the Bt toxin was developed using standard procedures and used to analyze transgenic plant material for expression of Bt sequences. For this procedure, an ELISA plate is pretreated with ethanol and affinitypurified rabbit anti-Bt antiserum (50 ul) at a concentraction of 3 ug/ml in borate-buffered saline (see below) is added to the plate. This was allowed to incubate overnight at 4'C. Antiserum was produced in response to immunizing rabbits with gradient-purified Bt crystals [Ang, B.J. Nickerson, Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
625-626 (1978)], incorporated herein by reference, -46- 1 solubilized with sodium dodecyl sulfate and washed with ELISA Wash Buffer (see below). It was then treated for 1 hour at room temperature with Blocking Buffer (see below) washed with ELISA Wash Buffer. Plant extract was added in an amount to give 50 ug of protein (this is typically ca. 5 microliters of extract). Leaf extraction buffer as protein is determined by the Bradford method (Bradford, Anal. Biochem. 72:248 (1976) incorporated herein by reference] using a. commercially available kit 10 obtained from Bio-Rad, Richmond, California. If dilution of the leaf extract is necessary, ELISA Diluent (see 0.0 below)] is used. Allow this to incubate overnight at 4'C. After a wash with ELISA Wash Buffer, 50 ul affinitypurified goat anti-Bt antiserum is added at a concentration of 3 ug/ml protein in ELISA Diluent. This is allowed to incubate for 1 hour at 37'C, then washed with ELISA Wash Buffer. 50 ul rabbit anti-goat antibody bound to alkaline phosphatase [commercially available from Sigma Chemicals, St. Louis, Mo.] is diluted 1:500 in ELISA Diluent and 20 allowed to incubate for 1 hour at 37*C, then washed with ELISA Wash Buffer. 50 microliters substrate [0.6 mg/ml p-nitrophenyl phosphate in ELISA Substrate Buffer (see below) are added and incubated for 30 minutes at room temperature. Reaction is terminated by adding microliters of 3 M NaOH. Absorbance is read at 405 nm in modified ELISA reader [Hewlett Packard, Stanford, Ca.].
Plant tissue transformed with the pCIB10/35SBt(BclI) when assayed using this ELISA procedure showed a positive reaction, indicating expression of the Bt gene.
EPBS (ELISA Phosphate Buffered Saline) mM NaPhosphate: Na 2
HPO
4 4.68 grams/4 liters NaH 2
PO
4 .H20 0.976 grams/4 liters 140 mM NaCl NaCl 32.7 grams/4 liters -47pH should be approximately 7.4 Borate Buffered Saline 100 mM Boric acid mM Na Bor~te mM NaCi Adjust pH to 8.4-8.5 with HC1 or NaOH'as needed.
RL!SA Blockcing Buffer in EPEs, Vk BSA 0.02% Na azide *006 0 ELISA Wash Buffer Tris-HCl pH 0.05% Tween 0.02% Na Azide C CC CC C C C C CC C
TRIS
C
C C
C
C CC
CC
-48- 1 ELISA Diluent In EPBS: 0.05% Tween 1% BSA 0.02% Na Azide ELTSA Substrate Buffer In 500 mls, 48 ml Diethanolamine, 10 24.5 mg MgCl 2 adjust to pH 9.8 with HCl.
ELISA Substrate mg p-nitrophenyl phosphate in 25 ml Substrate Buffer.
For bioassays, cell suspensions from antibioticresistant cell cultures obtained from transformations with these Agrobacteria were initiated. Suspensions were grown in medium supplemented with G418 20 and subcultured into fresh antibiotic-containing medium on 7-10 day intervals. Samples of these cultures were then used in bioassays to test for toxicity to '*lepidopterous insects. Twenty ml aliquots of these cultures were allowed to settle (cell volume 3-4ml), and resuspended in medium lacking antibiotics. Suspensions were then allowed to grow for an additional two days in this medium to deplete the cells of any residual antibiotic. Two circles of wet Whatman 2.3 cm filter paper were placed in the .bottom of a 3/4 oz portion cup.
A layer of transformed suspension culture cells 0.2 cm deep was placed onto the filter paper disk. A newlyhatched Manduca sea or Helothis xvrescens larva was placed into each portion cup. Controls were made up of larvae fed on non-transformed suspension culture cells.
Discs were replenished on 2-day intervals or as needed.
-49- 1 Manduca larvae generally require more plant material.
The growth rate and mortality of the larvae feeding on transformed cells compared with the growth rate of larvae feeding on untransformed cells was scored after 5 days, and clearly affirmed the toxicity of the BT gene product in transformed cotton cells.
.EXAMPLE Heliothis virescens eggs laid on sheets of cheesecloth "e are obtained from the Tobacco Insect Control Laboratory at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Caroliha. The cheesecloth sheets are transferred to a large covered glass beaker and incubated at 29 degrees,C 15 with wet paper towels to maintain humidity. The eggs hatched within three days. As soon as possible after hatching, the larvae (one larva per cup) are transferred to covered 3/4 oz. plastic cups. Each cup contains cotton leaf discs. Larvae are transferred using a fine bristle paint brush.
Leaf discs one centimeter in diameter are punched from leaves of cotton plants and placed on a circle of wet filter paper in the cup with the larva. At least 6leaf discs, representing both young and old leaves, are tested from each plant. Leaf discs are replaced at two-day intervals, or as necessary to feed the larvae.
Growth rates (size or combined weight of all replica worms] and mortality of larvae feeding on leaves of transformed plants are compared with those of larva feeding on untransformed cotton leaves.
Larvae feeding on discs of cotton transformed with pCIB10/35SB5(BclI) show a decrease in growth rate and increase in mortality compared with controls.
1 It was observed that a certain number of our regenerated plants appeared to have acquired genetically heritable phenotypic variations as a consequence of the process of regeneration. This variation is known as somaclonal variation. The following examples illustrate how somaclonal variation as a consequence of our regeneration procedure has been used to introduce commercially useful new traits into cotton varieties.
EXAMP~L11 Cotton Regenerants Tolerant to Fungal Pathogens The procedure of Example 1 was followed, and regenerated cotton plants obtained of the variety 15 and SJ4 were hardened and placed in the soil These plants were self-pollinated and the seed, representing the Fl generation, collected.
To obtain regenerants (somaclonal variants) more tolerant to Verticillium, the Fl generation was planted in a Vejrticllium infested field for progeny row analysis.
Seed of the varieties SJ4 and SJ5 were planted in the field as controls. Somaclonal variants more tolerant than the parental varieties to the ygxj jju fungus were identified in a few of the progeny rows by assessing overall plant vigor, yield, and the absence of foliar symtoms 'associated with the disease. FIG. 33 shows the progeny rows of regenerants planted in a Vertcx iuim infested field. FIG. 34 shows a Verticillium tolerant somaclonal variant of variety SJ4. This improvement in tolerance to the fungal pathogen was found to be genetically stable and passed on to subsequent generations.
i -51- 1 EXAMPLE 17 Cotton Reoenerants with altered growth habits The procedure of Example 13 was followed except that, rather than planting in disease-infested soil, the F1 generation was planted in a cotton breeding nursery.
The overall growth habit of the F1 regenerated progeny was compared to that of the control varieties. Somaclonal variants were identified which were more uniform in 10 growth habit and shorter in stature than the parental variety. One SJ5 regenerant, identified in our trials as Phy 6, was 20% shorter in stature than the parental variety. This kind of growth habit is desireable in cotton grown under narrow row (30" row spacing) cultural conditions. These traits were found to be genetically stable and passed on to subsequent generations.
EXAMPLE 18 *9 20 Cotton reaenerants with improved fiber traits The procedure of Example 13 was followed except that the Fl progeny of regenerants were planted in a cotton breeding nursery and allowed to set fruit. When the bolls were mature, the cotton was harvested and subjected to an analysis of several fiber quality traits including length, uniformity, tensile strength, elasticity, and micronaire. Somaclonal variants were identified which were ifproved significantly over the parental variety in one or more of these traits. Representative data from F2 progeny (cell pollination of the Fl) are included in the following Table 1. Values marked with an asterisk represent improvements in SJ5 regenerants which are statistically significant and have been found to breed true in subsequent generations.
-52- 1 Fiber Proverties Variety Length Uniformity Tensile Elasticity Micronaire -r strain Index Strength 1.13 48.7 24.7 6.8 4.27 3SP16 1.27* 51.2 24.6 8.0* 4.10* 3SP20 1.28* 53.1* 23.1 7.6* 4.13* 10 5SP10 1.11 53.2* 25.7* 6.2 4.55 5SP17 1.18. 51.7 26.7* 7.1 4.43 EXAMPLE19 Cotton recenerants with improved yield The procedure of Example 13 was followed except that the Fl progeny of regenerants of the variety SJ4 were planted in replicated yield trials along with nonregenerated controls. One variant, which exhibited a 20 more uniform growth habit and more vigorous growth habit, yielded 4% more cotton than the parental variety in the same trial. The data are given in Table 2 below.
Table 2 Variety or X Yield per X Yield Increase strain- plot (1b) lbs/Acre SJ4 Control 28.0 3049 Phy 4 29.1 3169 4%* *This differencA was significant at the 95% confidence level.
A 4% increase in yield would represent a return of almost $20 per acre to the average cotton grower in
N
-53- 1 California, where over one million acres of cotton are grown annually.
EXAMPLE Cotton Recenerants tolerant to a herbicide. (kanamvcin) Suspension cultures of the cotton variety B1644 were developed according to the method of Example Suspension cultures were then plated onto an agar medium i: as described in Example 6, but supplemented with the 10 herbicide (antibiotic) kanamycin (25mg/l). Most of the cells in the population died, but a few (1 to were tolerant and survived. These were selectively subcultured onto agar-solidified media supplemented with increasing concentrations of kanamycin, until the final concentration 15 reached 50mg/l. Embryos were then developed from this callus, and those resistant embryos were germinated into kanamycin resistant plants.
54- 1 TORM1ULA I
U
10 is 10t 20 30 .s 40 .s dTTAACACCC ?TCA.A ATlOATATTT ATAAJATTA 50GCC 70 so 90 100 It 11120 ICATAAOATO AOTCATATUT TTTAAArrOT AGYMYOMAA AACAOTATT A TA?CATMATO ISTT OTC 840 ISO 160 170 too OATTOOT T TrAATAAf AGATUMAOT AACTTATaOA TMACMTcCO AACATCMATO 190o 200 210 2:0 230 240 UTrorATCC TIATAATTOT TAAOTAACC CTOAACTAOA AOTATIADOT DDAGAAAGAA 2 10 02N0 270 *230 290 300 5ACAAACTOO flACAC=cA ACGATATTT CCTTGTcr.CT A cDMTrT c~y~i 310 320 330 340 350 360 AATtTOTTCC CGOTOClOGA YTTOTOTTAD CACTACITTOA TATAIATATOO UGAATTiTTO 370 360 390 400 410 OTC=TCTCA AIGACDCA "YTTAC AAATTAAACA O1TAATTAAC cAAAG.AATAQ 430 440 4w.0 460 470 46Cm AlAOAATTCCC TAGOAACCAA OCCATTTCTA GATTAOAAGO ACTAAGCAAT C-TTTATCA.AA 490 g00 a10 Z:O 31.% 540 TTTACOCAOA ATCTTYTAOA OAGTGUGAACP CADATCCTAC VAATCCADCA TTAAGAG.AA0 540 570 B30 M9 600I AGATOCOTAT 1CAATTCAAT OACAZ5AACA OTOCCCTTAC AACCTATT CCTCTTTTTD 610 &20 4;£0 ;40 A!4 660 CAOTTCAAAA TIATCAAGTT CCTCTTTTAT CADTATATOT TCAA3CAfCA AATTTACATT 4.70 &90 &90 700 '710 ?ATCAOTTTT OADADATOTT TCAOTGTTT CACAAOTO 00GATITGAT OCCAGACTA 7Z0 740 ?IWO 740 77073 'TCATAGTCO TTATAATOAT flAACTAUOC TTATTOCCAA CTATACAGAT CATOCTOTAC 790 B00 1110 320 930 340 CCTGGTACAA TA=CCOATTA UAGCOTOTAT 55011=00GA TTCAGAGAT rOCATAACAT 850 1&0. 070 go0 ITO ATAATCAATT TADAAGAGAA TTAACACTAA* CYOTATTADA TATCCTTTCT CTATTICCOA 910 920 930 940 950 940 ACTATOATAG TAGAACOTAT CCAATTCGAA CATTTCCCA ATTAACAADA OAAATTTATA 970 930 990 1000 :030 1020 CAAACCCACIT ATTAGAAAAT TTTOATOOTA GTTTTCOAGO CTCOOCTCAG OBCATAGAAO 1030 1040 1050 1040 1070 5050o OAACTATTAaC ACTCCACAT ITTATOGATA TACTTAACAD TATAACCATC TATACCDATO 190 3100 1110 1320 3 13140 CTCATAGAOO AOAATATTAT TOCITCADOCIC ATCAAATAAT OCCTTCTCCT OTAGOUTTIT 11:0O 1160 1170 *1180 1190 INC0 CODOCCCAGA ATYCACTTTT CCOCTATATO OAACTATGOOD AAATGCAOCT CCACAACAAC 3210 1220 12=0 1240 17W. 1:40 PAATTGTTGC ICAACTAGOT CADGGCGTGT ATAOAACATT ATCGTCCACT TTATAAGAA IV re 1290 1290 1300 1310 1320 OA=~fTrrA ?ATAC00ATA AATMATeAAC AATATCTIOT 1CTTAOOO ACAAMTTTO 13: 3340 130 1340 1370 1360 CTTATOOAAC CTcCTCAT TTOCCATO1 CTOTATACAG AAA=CA AC00TAGATT .1390 1400 1410, 3420 3430 1440 COCTOCOATGA AATACeCW.eA CAOAArAACA AcOTOCCAc 1AOCAA0OA ?TTAOCATC 1450 14&0 1470 1400 3490 1500 OATTAACC TOTTTCAATO m-yzrurrAo OCTTTAOTAA TAOTAOTUITA AOTAYAATAA no.
*000 0* 0 000* 0* 000 S 0~ 0S *0 0 1510 IS."* OADCTCCTAT OTTCTCTTOG Is,* 15e0 CACAA6ATTAC ACAAATACCr .16:0 3440 TTAAAGOACC AGGATTTACA 1490 A' 1700 CAA~cTTAAG ACTAAAATT 17:0 17,60 *ACOgTYCTAC CACAAATTTA 1810 1020 OGAATTTTTC AGCAACTATO 1070 logo TA0G1TTrAC TACTCC2TTT 19'30 1940 ATOTCTYCAR TTC-AGGCAAT 1990 2C000 TAACCTTTGA UOCAGAATAT 2C0v0 2040 CITCTYCCAA ICAAATCOG 2110 =10 CCAATTTAGT TOACOTTTA 2170 :290 AGAAAGTCAA ACA1OCCAAG 22:0 2:40
CAATAGAGAA
1:90 :zoo AAGGAOCCOA 7GACGTATTC 1530
ATACAYCOTA
15-90
TTAACAAAAT
1450
COAGGADATA
1110
ACTOCACCAT
1I40 1550 D1OCTOAATT TAAYAATATA 1400 1&10 CTACT*IATCT TOOCTCTOCA 1440 147 TTCTYCOAAO AACTTCACCT 1540
ATCCTTCAT
1420
ACTTCTOTCO
1490
GCCAGATYT
1720 1730 1740 TATCACAAAG ATATCGGGTA AGAATTCOCT 1177 a 1700 CAATTCCAT.A CATCAATTGA 1520 1940 ACTAUTCOA OTAATTTACA 1096 1900 AACTTTTCAA ATGGAYCAro 1MOO 1940 GAACTTTATA TAGATCOAAT :010 201.0 UATTTAGAAA GAGCACAAAA 2070 2030 ?TAAAAACAG ATTACODA 21-0 2140 TCYOATOAAT TTOTCTOZA 210 To 200 COACTTAUIO ATOASCOGAA =0 2260 CTAOACCOTO OCTaOGAGAG 1790 13cle) COCAAB&CCT ATTAATCACC 1350 1940 DTCCOGAAGC TTYA64CTO 1910 19:0 1CTATTTACO *TTAACOCTC 3970O 19b IOAATTTQTT CCGOCAGAAO 20:0 :oat) 03=00TOAAT CAUCTOTTTA 2090 :1C00 TTATCATATT GATCAAGTAT 2850 2166 1OAAAAAAAA CAATTGYCCO =o8 TTTACTTCAA GATCCAAACT =270 =:u0 AADTACCGAT ATTACCATd 2=10 "2o 3 0 230 AAAGAUAATT ACOTTACOCT ATICOOTACC TTCADADY
OCTATCCAAC
2410
ACCAATTAAD
2470
AIOCCAAACA
2"o* 22:z0 GTATTTATAT CAAAAAATAO ATCAOTCOAA 2420 2430 12440 ACCOTAIATC OAAOATAOTC AACACTTACA 2400 2490 2500 COAAACAoTA AATGTOCCAG OTACOOTTC 2390
ATTAAAAGCC
2400 AATC TAT TTA 2510
CTTATDGCCG
.400"
TATACCCOIT
2440
ATTCOCTACA
CTTTCAOCCC
-56- 9.
9 *99* *9 9 2330 !M40 2550 2540 CAR07 T COO0AATT 0c r-ArT CACATTT 259" 2400 2610 2620 GATUTACAGA Cl ATGAO UATTAOCTO TATOGOTOAT 263o 2660 2470. 2400 ATCOCCATOC AAOACTACGA AATCTAOAAT 7?CTCOAAUA 271w 2720 2730 2740 CACTACCO TOTGAAAAGA OCODAGAAAA AATOGAGAGA 2770 27180 2790 2300 CGGAAACAAA TATTOTAT AAAOAGGCAA AAOAATCYOT 2630 2640 23!0. 2140 CTCAATATCA TAGATTACAA GCOGATACCA ACATCGCGAT 2690 290 2910 2120 CCOTTCATAG CATTCOAoA OCTYATCYOC CTUADC70TC 9Z0 2960 2970 23 COOCTATTTT TGAAGAATTA GfAOOOCUTA ?TTTCACTOC 300 30:0 zo:o Z cI'O CAAATOTCAT TAAAAATGOT OATYTTAATA ATOGCTTATC 3070 :000 30re) 3100 ATOTAGATGT ADAAGAACAA AACAACCACC OTTCOGTCCT 3130 3140 3130I 10 CAGAAGTGTC ACAAGAAGTT COrOTCTOTC COGOTCOTOO *3190 .0:00 32 10 z: COTACAAGOA 0DATATOA GAAOCYTOC TAACCATTCA 3:vo 3:60 3270 3:60 ACGAACTGAA OTTTAGCAAC. )OTOTAGAAG AGOAACTATA 3310 3-120 3330 3340 OTAATGATTA TACTGCOACT CAAGAADAAT ATCAOTAC 3.170 3330 339?0 3400 CATATCACO AOCCTATCAA AOCAATTCYT CIDTACCAC 3430 3440 34ww0 3440 $AOAAAAAOC ATATACACAT OGACGAAGAG ACAATCCTTO 3490 3100 3SIO Z520 OGGATTACAC ACCACTACCA OCTGOCTATO TOACAAAAGA 3"o UO4 =376 30-80 CCCATAAOOT ATGATTGAG ATCGOAGAAA CGGAAGGAAC 3420 3620 34310 Z640 AATTACTTCT TATOGAGGAA TAATATATOC TTTATAATCT W470 3430 3690 3700 GATTACTOAC TYOTATTGAC AGATAAATAA OGAAATTTTT "370 2o CTCCTTOOAC ATTUATaTTCI 2030 2640 ATTCAAGATT AAGACCOCAAO 24&0 2700 GAAACCATTA 0?ACIAOAMO 2750 2760 CAAACOTOAA AAATTOGG"T 2810 2120* ADATOCTTTA TrTTOTAAACT 2370 2810 CATYCATC O CADATAAAC Ma3 2940 TOTGATTCCO GGTOTCAA~b 2990 O., ATTCTCCCTA TATCATGCOA 3030 3040 CTOCTOGAAC OTGAAA023C 3110 3120 TOTTOTTCC* GAATOGGAAG Z70 -*=180 CT4AICCTT COZOICACAO 3=0 3Z40 TUAOATCOAD AACAATACAG =290 1CCA W AAC ACOSTAACOT 33:0 3340 GTACACTTCT CGTAATCGAG 31.410 W0 TCATTATOCA TCAGCCTATO 3470 .0460 TOAAICTAAC AGAOCATATO 330 3540 ATTAGCTAC TTCCC-AGAAA :590 Z&C#0 ATTCAACOTO CACAGCGTOO U3&:o 3660 AOTGIGCA AATAAAGAAT 3710 ATATCAATAA AAAACGOCA
S
3730 3740 37z0 Z760 3770 3730 tCACTCTTAA AAOAATGATO TrCCGTTTTTT CTATGATTTA ACGAGTGATA TTTAAATGTT -37- 3790 3900 381 3320 3330 3340 T yTTOCOA AooC TTTACT TAACUOGOTA CC cAo C=ATCAT TMOATTOG 33510 3040 3670 3360 set0 3900 CACTACCC= *ATOTCAAA AAACOTTATT uliTCTAAAA AOCTAOCTAG AAAGGATOAC 3910 3".0 3Y30O 3940 3950 3960 ATTTTTTATO MTCTflCA ?1*CAAOATCA OATTACAACTA 711T1TTO1AAG AOMCTOTATCO 3930 3990 4000 4020 CATTTAACC CCTTCTCTIT ToaAAGAACT COCTAAAOIAA TTACOTTTTO TAAAAAOAAA 4030 4040 4010 4040 4070 o 40'30 10 ^0AATTT TCAGGAAATO MATTAOCAC CATATOTATC TOCCOCADIC AACUTACAC 4090 4100 4110 4120% 4330 44 OAGTOATTCT CTCOTTCOAC TA1OCAC5TCA AYTACACOCC OCCACAOCAC TCTTATGAGT .41-0 4140 41?O 4150 4190 see CCAGAAOZA TCAATAAACO CTTTGATAAA AAADCOUTTO AAYTTOAA ATATATTT 4210 4::o 4=~0 4:40 4:-d :6 .0:0 15 TCTCCATT 'AT OOAAAAGTAA ACTTTOTAAA ACATCAOCCA TTTCAACTOZ ADCACTCACO 4270 4:50 4:90 43C'C1, 4310 T ATTTTCAAC GAAYCCOTAT 1'TTAOATOCO *COATTTTCC AACTACCOAA ACATTTAOCA 4Z. t 4:40 4:S0 4.00 CATOTATATC CTGTCAGO TGGTTOTOCA CRAACTOCAD
Claims (17)
1. A method for transforming cotton which includes the steps of: providing a cotton explant; culturing the cotton explant in a first solid callus growth medium containing glucose as a carbon source from a period of time sufficient for phenolic secretion from the explant forming the callus to end and for undifferentiated callus to develop from the explant; transferring the callus at the end of phenolic secretions to a second solid callus growth medium containing sucrose as the carbon source; culturing the callus in the second solid callus growth medium from a period of item sufficient to allow development of embryogenetic callus providing at least one embryo; transferring the embryo to a plant germination medium; 15 wherein the transformation involves exposing the explant during regeneration to an Agrobacterium vector containing an expressible gene sequence foreign to cotton for a time sufficient for the gene to transfer to the plant cells.
2. A method according to claim 1 which further includes the step of exposing the transformed plant material to an antibiotic which is toxic to the agrobacterium for a time sufficient to kill the agrobacterium.
3. A method claimed in claim 1 in which the first and second solid callus growth medium comprises a Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 1 to S* 25 10 mg/1 naphthaleneacetic acid.
4. A method as claimed in claim 2 in which the antibiotic toxic to the Agrobacterium is cefotaxime.
5. Cotton regenerants exhibiting improved fiber quality traits of at least greater fiber length, tensile strength, elasticity on lower micronaire as compared to the parental variety, wherein said regenerants are produced by a method according to any one of claims 1 to 4.
6. Cotton plants transformed to exhibit herbicide tolerance, wherein said plants are produced by a method according to any one of claims 1 to 4.
7. Cotton regenerants transformed to exhibit herbicide tolerance, wherein said regenerants are produced by a method according to any one of claims 1 to 4.
8. Cotton regenerants exhibiting increased tolerance to fungal pathogens, wherein said regenerants are produced by a method according to any one of claims 1 to 4.
9. A vector for conferring antibiotic resistance to a cotton plant which comprises two T-DNA right border sequences from A. Tumefaciens capable of integration with the plant genome flanking a chimeric gene capable of expression in cotton and of conferring resistance to the antibiotics Kanamycin and G418. 15
10. A vector as claimed in claim 9 in which the chimeric gene includes in sequence a napoline synthetase promoter, a neomycin phosphotransferase II coding regions from Tn5 and the terminator from the herpes simplex virus thimidine kinase gene.
11. A cotton cell including a vector, said vector including: integration sequences derived from the T region of the Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens for integrating into the genome of cotton plants; a cotton plant expressible promoter for promoting transcription in cotton plants; a DNA border sequence encoding a selectable marker wherein the selectable marker is a herbicide resistance gene; and a cotton plant expressible termination signal for terminating transcription in cotton plants.
12. A cotton cell according to claim 11 herein the herbicide resistance is selected from the group consisting of resistance to glyphosate and resistance to hygromycin.
13. A cotton cell according to claim 11 further including a DNA sequence for conferring pest resistance wherein the pest resistance is selected from the group consisting of resistance to Manduca sexta and resistance to Heliothis virescens.
14. A cotton cell according to claim 13 wherein the DNA encodes a gene for protoxin.
15. A process for transforming cotton including the steps of: introducing to the genome of a cotton cell a gene sequence foreign to the cotton cell from a vector including: an integration sequence including two right border sequences derived from the T region of the Ti plasmid ofAgrobacterium tumefaciens for integrating into the genome of the cotton cell; a cotton plant expressible promoter for promoting transcription in the cotton cell; S(c) a DNA sequence encoding a selectable marker wherein the selectable marker contains a gene sequence foreign to the cotton cell; 15 a cotton plant expressible termination signal for terminating transcription in the cotton cell; and (ii) developing a transformed cotton plant from said cotton cell.
16. A process for the transformation of cotton which includes the steps of: introducing to the genome of a cotton cell a gene sequence foreign to the cotton cell from a vector including: P(a) integration sequence including the right border of the T region of the Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens; a cotton plant expressible promoter for promoting 25 transcription in the cotton cell; a DNA sequence encoding a selectable marker which is a herbicide resistance gene sequence foreign to the cotton cell; a cotton plant expressible termination signal for terminating transcription in the cotton cell; and (ii) developing a transformed cotton plant from the cotton cell.
17. A process for the transformation of cotton which includes the steps of: introducing to the genome of a cotton cell a gene sequence foreign to the cotton cell from a vector including: integration sequence including two right border sequences of the T region of the Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens; 61 a cotton plant expressible promoter for promoting transcription in the cotton cell; a DNA sequence encoding a selectable marker which contains a protoxin gene from B. thuringiensis; a cotton plant expressible termination signal for terminating transcription in the cotton cell; and (ii) developing a transformed cotton plant from the cotton cell. Dated this twenty-sixth day of May 1999. MYCOGEN CORPORATION go*# Patent Attorneys for the Applicant: S F B RICE &CO p. p p *o p e p pp
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AU56002/99A AU5600299A (en) | 1987-11-18 | 1999-10-21 | Regeneration and transformation of cotton |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US122200 | 1987-11-18 | ||
AU56002/99A AU5600299A (en) | 1987-11-18 | 1999-10-21 | Regeneration and transformation of cotton |
Related Parent Applications (3)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
AU29266/89A Division AU632038B2 (en) | 1987-11-18 | 1988-11-16 | Regeneration and transformation of cotton |
AU35284/93A Division AU668915B2 (en) | 1987-11-18 | 1993-03-16 | Regeneration and transformation of cotton |
AU64247/96A Division AU708250B2 (en) | 1987-11-18 | 1996-08-23 | Regeneration and transformation of cotton |
Related Child Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
AU2002300516A Division AU2002300516A1 (en) | 1987-11-18 | 2002-08-13 | Regeneration and Transformation of Cotton |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
AU5600299A true AU5600299A (en) | 2000-01-13 |
Family
ID=3741623
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
AU56002/99A Abandoned AU5600299A (en) | 1987-11-18 | 1999-10-21 | Regeneration and transformation of cotton |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
AU (1) | AU5600299A (en) |
-
1999
- 1999-10-21 AU AU56002/99A patent/AU5600299A/en not_active Abandoned
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US5244802A (en) | Regeneration of cotton | |
US6660914B1 (en) | Transformed cotton plants | |
EP0344302B1 (en) | Regeneration and transformation of cotton | |
US5874662A (en) | Method for producing somoclonal variant cotton plants | |
US20070006351A1 (en) | Method for regenerating and transforming St. Augustinegrass from embryogenic callus | |
WO1997012512A2 (en) | Transformation of cotton plants | |
US20010026939A1 (en) | Insecticidal cotton plant cells | |
JP4463456B2 (en) | High-efficiency Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of cotton using petiole grafts | |
US6072105A (en) | Insect-resistant transgenic eggplant and method of making | |
US5856177A (en) | Promoters derived from the maize phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase gene involved in C4 photosynthesis | |
US20090165175A1 (en) | Methods for high efficiency transformation and regeneration of plant suspension cultures | |
AU708250B2 (en) | Regeneration and transformation of cotton | |
CA1335799C (en) | Regeneration and transformation of cotton | |
AU5600299A (en) | Regeneration and transformation of cotton | |
AU2007202314A1 (en) | Regeneration and transformation of cotton | |
IL104845A (en) | Method for the transformation of cotton on solid growth medium vectors used in the above method and cotton plants obtained by the above method |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
MK5 | Application lapsed section 142(2)(e) - patent request and compl. specification not accepted |