Genetic transformation of Citrus sinensis cv. Hamlin with hrpN gene from Erwinia amylovora and evaluation of the transgenic lines for resistance to citrus canker

Publication Overview
TitleGenetic transformation of Citrus sinensis cv. Hamlin with hrpN gene from Erwinia amylovora and evaluation of the transgenic lines for resistance to citrus canker
AuthorsBarbosa-Mendes JM, Filho FdAAM, Filho AB, Harakava R, Beer SV, Mendes BMJ
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameScientia horticulturae
Volume122
Issue1
Year2009
Page(s)109-115
CitationBarbosa-Mendes JM, Filho FdAAM, Filho AB, Harakava R, Beer SV, Mendes BMJ. Genetic transformation of Citrus sinensis cv. Hamlin with hrpN gene from Erwinia amylovora and evaluation of the transgenic lines for resistance to citrus canker. Scientia horticulturae. 2009; 122(1):109-115.

Abstract

Transgenic Citrus sinensis (L.) Osb. cv. Hamlin plants expressing the hrpN gene were obtained by Agrobacterium tumefaciens (Smith and Towns) Conn-mediated transformation. hrpN encodes a harpin protein, which elicits the hypersensitive response and systemic acquired resistance in plants. The gene construct consisted of gst1, a pathogen-inducible promoter, a signal peptide for protein secretion to the apoplast, the selection genes nptII or aacC1 and the Nos terminator. The function of gst1 in citrus was evaluated in transgenic C. sinensis cv. Valencia harboring the reporter gene uidA (gus) driven by this promoter. Histochemical analysis for gus revealed that gst1 is activated in citrus leaves by both wounding and inoculation with Xanthomonas axonopodis Starr and Garces pv. citri (Hasse) Vauterin et al. Genetic transformation was confirmed by Southern blot hybridization in eight cv. Hamlin acclimatized plants. RT-PCR confirmed hrpN gene expression in seven cv. Hamlin transgenic lines before pathogen inoculation. Some hrpN transgenic lines showed severe leaf curling and abnormal growth. Six hrpN transgenic lines were propagated and evaluated for susceptibility to X. axonopodis pv. citri. RT-PCR confirmed gene expression in all six hrpN transgenic lines after pathogen inoculation. Several of the hrpN transgenic lines showed reduction in susceptibility to citrus canker as compared with non-transgenic plants. One hrpN transgenic line exhibited normal vegetative development and displayed very high resistance to the pathogen, estimated as up to 79% reduction in disease severity. This is the first report of genetic transformation of citrus using a pathogen-inducible promoter and the hrpN gene. Further evaluations of the transgenic plants under field conditions are planned. Nevertheless, the evidence to date suggests that the hrpN gene reduces the susceptibility of citrus plants to the canker disease.
Features
This publication contains information about 2 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
hrpNhrpNgenetic_marker
uidAuidAgenetic_marker
Stocks
This publication contains information about 2 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
HamlinHamlinaccession
ValenciaValenciaaccession
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Publication Date2009
Published Location|||
Language Abbreng
Publication Model[electronic resource].
URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scienta.2009.04.001
KeywordsCitrus sinensis, oranges, transgenic plants, antibacterial proteins, Erwinia amylovora, hypersensitive response, systemic acquired resistance, disease resistance, promoter regions, protein secretion, intercellular spaces, signal peptide, leaves, histochemistry, reporter genes, beta-glucuronidase, Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri, plant pathogenic bacteria, bacterial diseases of plants, cankers (plants), genetic resistance, disease severity, harpin proteins, molecular sequence data