Transformed plants with elevated levels of chloroplastic SOD are not more resistant to superoxide toxicity |
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Authors: | James M. Tepperman Pamela Dunsmuir |
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Affiliation: | (1) DNA Plant Technology Corporation, 6701 San Pablo Avenue, 94608 Oakland, CA, USA;(2) Present address: United States Department of Agriculture, University of California, Berkeley, Plant Gene Expression Center, 800 Buchanan Street, 94710 Albany, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() The petunia nuclear gene which encodes the chloroplast isozyme of superoxide dismutase, SOD-1, has been fused with an efficient rbcS promoter fragment and 3 flanking region and introduced into tobacco and tomato cells. Transformed plants carrying this chimeric gene have up to 50-fold the levels of SOD-1 which occur in wild-type plants. However, tobacco plants with 30-to 50-fold the normal SOD-1 activity do not exhibit resistance to the light-activated herbicide paraquat. Similarly, tomato plants with 2-to 4-fold increases in SOD-1 do not exhibit tolerance to photoinhibitory conditions known to increase superoxide levels (high light, low temperatures and low CO2 concentrations). Our data indicate that increasing the chloroplastic SOD level in a plant cell is not sufficient to reduce the toxicity of superoxide. |
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Keywords: | chloroplast SOD paraquat stress genetic engineering |
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