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1.
Summary Mesophyll protoplasts of a kanamycin-resistant, nopaline-positive Nicotiana plumbaginifolia seed line were inactivated by -irradiation and electrically fused with unirradiated mesophyll protoplasts of N. tabacum. Hybrids were selected on kanamycin and regenerated. Genetic material from N. plumbaginifolia was detected in these plants by the following criteria: (1) morphology, (2) esterase isozyme profiles, and (3) the presence of nopaline in leaf extracts. All of the plants regenerated were morphologically more similar to N. tabacum than to N. plumbaginifolia, and many were indistinguishable from N. tabacum. It was found that 37 plants displayed one or two esterases characteristic of N. plumbaginifolia in addition to a full set of esterases from N. tabacum. Based on their esterases, we have classified these plants as somatic hybrids. However, irradiation has clearly reduced the amount of N. plumbaginifolia genetic material that they retain; 24 plants were found that had only N. tabacum esterases but that produced nopaline and were kanamycin resistant. Genomic DNA from several of these plants was probed by Southern blotting for the presence of the authentic neomycin phosphotransferase gene (kanamycin-resistance gene) — all were found to contain the gene. These plants were classified as asymmetric hybrids. Finally, 25 plants were regenerated that were kanamycin sensitive, negative for nopaline, and contained only N. tabacum esterases. All of the regenerated plants, including this final category, were male sterile. As transferring the N. plumbaginifolia cytoplasm to an N. tabacum nuclear background results in an alloplasmic form of male sterility, all of the plants regenerated in this study appear to be cybrids irrespective of their nuclear constitution. Chromosome analysis of the asymmetric hybrids showed that most of them contained one more chromosome than is normal for N. tabacum. The somatic hybrids examined all had several additional chromosomes. Although male sterile, the asymmetric hybrids were female fertile to varying degrees and were successfully backcrossed with N. tabacum. Analysis of the resultant F1 progeny indicated that the kanamycin-resistance gene from N. plumbaginifolia is partially unstable during meiosis, as would be expected for factors inherited on an unpaired chromosome.Abbreviations Km r kanamycin resistant - Km s kamacysin sensitive - Nop + nopaline positive - Nop nopaline negative  相似文献   

2.
Summary We report here on the obtainment of interspecific somatic, asymmetric, and highly asymmetric nuclear hybrids via protoplast fusion. Asymmetric nuclear hybrids were obtained after fusion of mesophyll protoplasts from a nitrate reductase-deficient cofactor mutant of N. plumbaginifolia with irradiated (100 krad) kanamycin resistant leaf protoplasts of a haploid N. tabacum. Selection for nitrate reductase (NR) and/or kanamycin (Km) resistance resulted in the production of three groups of plants (NR+, NR+, KmR, and NR-KmR). Cytological analysis of some hybrid regenerants showed the presence of numerous tobacco chromosomes and chromosome fragments, besides a polyploid N. plumbaginifolia genome (tetra or hexaploid). All the regenerants tested were male sterile but some of them could be backcrossed to the recipient partner. In a second experiment, somatic and highly asymmetric nuclear hybrids were obtained after fusion of mesophyll protoplasts from the universal hybridizer of N. plumbaginifolia with suspension protoplasts of a tumor line of N. tabacum. Selection resulted in two types of colonies: nonregenerating hybrid calli turned out to be true somatic hybrids, while cytological analysis of regenerants obtained on morphogenic calli did not show any presence of donor-specific chromosomes. Forty percent of the hybrid regenerants were completely fertile, while the others could only be backcrossed to the recipient N. plumbaginifolia. Since the gene we selected for is not yet cloned, we were not able to demonstrate the transfer of genetic material at the molecular level. However, since no reversion frequency for the nitrate reductase mutant is known, and due to a detailed cytological knowledge of both fusion partners, we feel confident in speculating that intergenomic recombination between N. plumbaginifolia and N. tabacum has occurred.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Electrofusion was carried out between mesophyll protoplasts from the transformed diploid S. tuberosum clone 413 (2n=2x=24) which contains various genetic markers (hormone autotrophy, opine synthesis, kanamycin resistance, -glucuronidase activity) and mesophyll protoplasts of a diploid wild-type clone of N. plumbaginifolia (2n=2x=20). Hybrid calli were obtained after continuous culture on selection medium containing kanamycin. Parental chromosome numbers, determined at 2 months after fusion, revealed hybrid-specific differences between the individual calli. On the basis of these differences three categories of hybrids were distinguished. Category I hybrids contained between 8 and 24 potato chromosomes and more than 20 N. plumbaginifolia chromosomes; category II hybrids had between 1 and 20 N. plumbaginifolia chromosomes and more than 24 potato chromosomes; category III hybrids contained diploid or subdiploid numbers of chromosomes from both parents. The hybrids were evenly distributed over the three categories. After a 1-year culture of 24 representative hybrid callus lines on selection medium the karyotype of 10 hybrids remained stable, whereas 8 hybrids showed polyploidization of the genome of one parent, together with no or minor changes of the chromosome numbers of the other parent. Six hybrids showed slight changes in the hybrid karyotype. The elimination of chromosomes of a particular parent was not correlated to their metaphase location. The processes of spontaneous biparental chromosome elimination leading to the production of asymmetric hybrids of different categories are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Callus protoplasts of a Nicotiana tabacum chlorophyll-deficient mutant were fused with mesophyll protoplasts from one of following five sources: 4 cmsanalogs of tobacco bearing the cytoplasms of N. plumbaginifolia, N. suaveolens, N. repanda, and N. undulata, respectively, as well as wild species N. glauca. In another series of experiments, callus protoplasts from the chlorophyll-deficient genome Su/Su mutant of tobacco were fused with mesophyll protoplasts of the wild species N. glauca and those of a plastome chlorophyll-deficient tobacco mutant. The screening of hybrids consisted of visual identification followed by mechanical isolation and cloning of heteroplasmic fusion products in microdroplets of nutrient medium. Studies of regenerated plants included the analyses of gross morphology of plants, leaf and flower morphology, analysis of chromosome size and morphology and chromosome numbers, studies of multiple molecular forms of esterase and amylase, analysis of chloroplast DNA restriction patterns and analyses of chlorophyll-deficiency controlled by Su and P genes. The study of progeny of 41 clones representing all species' combinations demonstrated that regenarants of most (63%) clones from intraspecific (for nuclear genes) combinations were cybrid forms, whereas in the case of the fusion N. tabacum + N. glauca, the true nuclear hybrids prevailed and the proportion of cybrids did not exceed 26%. Clones regenerating both hybrid and cybrid plants from the same fusion product were also found.  相似文献   

5.
Protoplasts of a light sensitive plastome mutant of Nicotiana tabacum (2 n=48) were irradiated and fused with iodoacetate-treated Nicotiana plumbaginifolia (2 n=20) protoplasts. Treated parental protoplasts were unable to divide. Metabolic complementation, however, helped the recovery of interspecific fusion products which survived and formed calli. Altogether 40 clones were investigated. N. plumbaginifolia plants were obtained in 15 clones (38%), somatic hybrids in 23 clones, and both types of regenerates were found in 2 clones. Irradiation therefore significantly increased the frequency of segregant formation with the non-irradiated N. plumbaginifolia nuclei (the frequency was 1.4% in the absence of irradiation). Regenerated plants in most cases (31 out of 34) contained chloroplasts from the irradiated parent. In 6 clones plants were obtained with both types of chloroplast. Thus, irradiated N. tabacum chloroplasts had an improved chance of dominating the heterokaryonderived cells, many of which contained N. plumbaginifolia nucleus. The system described should be generally applicable for the transfer of chloroplasts without the use of selectable genetic markers.  相似文献   

6.
Somatic hybrid plants were produced by fusion of protoplasts from cell cultures of the Nicotiana tabacum L. sulfur mutant Su/Su and from leaf mesophyll of Nicotiana glauca Graham. After fusion the N. glauca protoplasts failed to survive under the selected culture condition. From the hybrid cells light green shoots were produced. The hybrid plants exhibited intermediate characters between parental species with respect to leaf morphology, trichome density, floral structure and flower color. The chromosome number of 25 hybrid plants was 2n = 72 and both N. glauca and N. tabacum chromosomes were identified in the hybrids. Results of isoenzyme analysis showed bands of both parents and a specific (hybrid) band for aspartate amino-transferase. Small subunit fraction-1-protein of somatic hybrids also consisted of the sum of N. glauca and N. tabacum bands. Leaf spot formation associated with the Su locus of N. tabacum was observed in somatic hybrids.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Somatic hybrid plants of Nicotiana tabacum (bar) (+) Nicotiana megalosiphon (npt II) were recovered after polyethylene glycol (PEG) mediated fusion. Hybrid calluses were selected on the basis of their dual resistance to bialaphos and kanamycin or UV inactivation of the donor species (Nicotiana megalosiphon) protoplasts. The hybrid nature of the individual clones obtained was confirmed by AFLP analysis. An array of plants were recovered including self-fertile hybrid plants with N. tabacum or N. megalosiphon phenotype, self-sterile plants with N. tabacum habit, leaf and intermediate flower morphology, self-sterile plants with N. megalosiphon habit, abnormal leaves and intermediate flowers, and self sterile plants of N. megalosiphon type with abnormal characters. Viable pollen was observed in hybrid plants from the third group. The hybrids possessed a nuclear DNA content near that of the diploid tobacco or N. megalosiphon, and also near that of the tetraploid genome size of N. megalosiphon. The results provide evidence for nonpreferential loss of one of the parental genomes and spontaneous asymmetrization of hybrid plants. The present study shows that by means of somatic hybridization a great genetic diversity in the hybrid clones can be achieved.  相似文献   

8.
Summary A protoplast fusion experiment was carried out aiming to obtain somatic hybrid plants of transgenic Nicotiana tabacum (bar) (+) N. rotundifolia (npt II). The bialaphos resistance marker (bar) was introduced into N. tabacum via Agrobacterium tumefaciens using vector pGV1500 carrying the bar gene phosphinothricin acetyltransferase. N. rotundifolia (npt II) was recovered after direct gene transformation of protoplasts by the pGP6 plasmid carrying the npt II gene for neomycin phosphotransferase. Both plasmids possessed 35S CaMV promotors. Hybrid selection was based on dual bialaphos— kanamycin resistance. Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis of regenerated plants showed the presence of species-specific bands for both parents, which confirmed their hybrid nature. N. tabacum (bar) (+) N. rotundifolia (npt II) hybrids exhibited a great diversity in morphology. Fertile hybrids which possessed N. tabacum or N. rotundifolia morphology were recovered. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that the N. tabacum- and N. rotundifolio-like hybrids had nuclear DNA contents near that of N. tabacum (9.40±0.24pg) or N. rotundifolia (5.29±0.36 pg), respectively, and were highly asymmetric. Other hybrids combined traits from the two species at various levels—N. tabacum habit or branched, similar to N. rotundifolia. Their leaves varied in shape. The flowers of the hybrid plants were of N. tabacum or N. rotundifolia type, or had N. rotundifolia dimensions, pink with N. tabacum corolla or white with curly fused petals. All were self-sterile or male sterile. The nuclear DNA content varied from 8.90±0.30 to 19.57±0.33 pg. The data from the morphological and cytological analysis provided vidence that parental chromosome elimination in the hybrid clones was spontaneous and not species-specific and that diploidization of the tobacco genome might have occurred in some clones during in vitro culture. This reflects the genomic incompatibility between the two species.  相似文献   

9.
Protoplasts of a kanamycin-resistant (KR, nuclear genome), streptomycin-resistant (SR, chloroplast genome) and chlorophyll-deficient (A1, nuclear genome) Nicotiana tabacum (KR-SA) cell suspension cultures or X-ray-irradiated mesophyll protoplasts of kanamycin- and streptomycin-resistant green plants (KR-SR) were fused with protoplasts of a cytoplasmic male-sterile (CMS) Daucus carota L. cell suspension cultures by electrofusion. Somatic hybrid plants were selected for kanamycin resistance and the ability to produce chlorophyll. Most of the regenerated plants had a normal D. carota morphology. Callus induced from these plants possessed 23–32 chromosomes, a number lower than the combined chromosome number (66) of the parents, and were resistant to kanamycin, but they segregated for streptomycin resistance, which indicated that N. tabacum chloroplasts had been eliminated. Genomic DNA from several regenerated plants was analyzed by Southern hybridization for the presence of the neomycin phosphotransferase gene (NPTII); all of the plants analyzed were found to contain this gene. Mitochondrial (mt) DNA was analyzed by Southern hybridization of restriction endonuclease digests of mtDNA with two DNA probes, PKT5 and coxII. The results showed that the two plants analyzed possessed the mitochondria of D. carota. These results demonstrate that the regenerated plants are interfamilial somatic hybrids.  相似文献   

10.
Patterns of organelle inheritance were examined among fertile somatic hybrids between allotetraploid Nicotiana tabacum L. (2n=4x=48) and a diploid wild relative N. glutinosa L. (2n=2x=24). Seventy somatic hybrids resistant to methotrexate and kanamycin were recovered following fusion of leaf mesophyll protoplasts of transgenic methotrexate-resistant N. tabacum and kanamycin-resistant N. glutinosa. Evidence for hybridization of nuclear genomes was obtained by analysis of glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and peroxidase isoenzymes and by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis using a heterologous nuclear ribosomal DNA probe. Analysis of chloroplast genomes in a population of 41 hybrids revealed a random segregation of chloroplasts since 25 possessed N. glutinosa chloroplasts and 16 possessed N. tabacum chloroplasts. This contrasts with the markedly non-random segregation of plastids in N. tabacum (+)N. rustica and N. tabacum (+) N. debneyi somatic hybrids which we described previously and which were recovered using the same conditions for fusion and selection. The organization of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in 40 individuals was examined by RFLP analysis with a heterologous cytochrome B gene. Thirty-eight somatic hybrids possessed mitochondrial genomes which were rearranged with respect to the parental genomes, two carried mtDNA similar to N. tabacum, while none had mtDNA identical to N. glutinosa. The somatic hybrids were self-fertile and fertile in backcrosses with the tobacco parent.Contribution No. 1487 Plant Research Centre  相似文献   

11.
Summary Mature pollen protoplasts (n) isolated from kanamycin resistant plants of Nicotiana tabacum (2n = 4x = 48) were fused with somatic mesophyll protoplasts (2n) of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia (2n = 20) to produce plants. A total of 3.6·106 mature pollen protoplasts were fused with 7·106 mesophyll protoplasts using a PEG/Ca2+ method. Mature pollen protoplasts did not divide in our culture conditions, and N. plumbaginifolia protoplasts stopped dividing when the protoplast-derived colonies were transferred to a selection medium containing paromomycine (20 mg·l-1). A total of 133 actively growing colonies were recovered on the selection medium containing kanamycin (100 mg·l-1). Plants from twenty resulting cell lines were confirmed as hybrids (17) or cybrids (3) based on leaf and floral morphology and fertility analysis. Isozyme pattern analysis confirmed the nuclear hybrid and cybrid nature, respectively, for 2 and 3 typical gametosomatic selected plants. Root tip squashes of 6 of the gametosomatic hybrid plants revealed chromosome numbers ranging from 44 to 68; the 3 selected cybrid plants had 48 chromosomes. Evidence for organelle transmission from the mesophyll partner in the gametosomatic plants is shown. From the analysis it can be concluded that the gametosomatic fusion involving mature pollen protoplasts (n) carrying a dominant selection marker can be convenient for synthesis of either hybrids or cybrids. Such gametosomatic fusion is therefore considered as a new approach towards the production of androgenetic plants with a choosen cytoplasm.Abbreviations AAT aspartate aminotransferase - BCP bromocresol purple - EST esterase - MES 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid - AP acid phosphatase - PEG polyethyleneglycol - PER peroxydase  相似文献   

12.
Menczel L  Galiba G  Nagy F  Maliga P 《Genetics》1982,100(3):487-495
Chloroplasts of Nicotiana tabacum SR1 were transferred into Nicotiana plumbaginifolia by protoplast fusion. The protoplasts of the organelle donor were irradiated with different lethal doses using a 60Co source, to facilitate the elimination of their nuclei from the fusion products. After fusion induction, clones derived from fusion products and containing streptomycin-resistant N. tabacum SR1 chloroplasts were selected by their ability to green on a selective medium. When N. tabacum protoplasts were inactivated by iodoacetate instead of irradiation, the proportion of N. plumbaginifolia nuclear segregant clones was low (1–2%). Irradiation markedly increased this value: Using 50, 120, 210 and 300 J kg-1 doses, the frequency of segregant clones was 44, 57, 84 and 70 percent, respectively. Regeneration of resistant N. plumbaginifolia plants with SR1 chloroplasts indicated that plastids can be rescued from the irradiated cells by fusion with untreated protoplasts. Resistant N. plumbaginifolia plants that were regenerated (43 clones studied) had diploid (2n = 2X = 20) or tetraploid chromosome numbers and were identical morphologically to parental plants. The absence of aneuploids suggests that in these clones irradiation resulted in complete elimination of the irradiated N. tabacum nuclei. Resistance is inherited maternally (five clones tested). The demonstration of chloroplast transfer and the presence of N. tabacum plastids in the N. plumbaginifolia plants was confirmed by chloroplast DNA fragmentation patterns after EcoRI digestion.  相似文献   

13.
Summary In order to produce a triple mutant, sexual crosses between a chlorophyll-deficient, streptomycin-resistant mutant of Nicotiana tabacum (SA) and a kanamycin-resistant transformant of N. tabacum (KR.) were carried out. From the offspring of this cross, a triple mutant (KR-SA) was selected. In N. tabacum KR-SA, chlorophyll deficiency is due to recessive mutation in the nuclear genome, streptomycin resistance is due to a dominant mutation in the chloroplast genome, and kanamycin resistance is shown to be a dominant nuclear marker. Cell suspension protoplasts of N. tabacum KRSA were fused with callus protoplasts of Solanum melongena by dextran treatment. Somatic hybrid plants were selected for streptomycin resistance and the ability to produce clorophyll in regenerated plants. By using this selection system, green plants were recovered from two colonies. When these green plants were then tested for kanamycin resistance, all analyzed plants carried this trait. In addition, the hybrid nature of these plants was confirmed by investigation of the peroxidase isozyme. The present results show that the use of N. tabacum KR-SA in studies of somatic hybridization makes it possible to select somatic hybrid plants easily and provides information of the N. tabacum genome.Chemical Regulation of Biomechanism, The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research, Wako 351-01, Japan  相似文献   

14.
Summary Protoplast fusion makes possible the fusion of two different cytoplasms, allowing genetical analysis of cytoplasmic factors. Two varieties of Nicotiana tabacum differing by their cytoplasms have been used. Techne, the first variety, obtained by an interspecific cross between N. debneyi (female) and N. tabacum (male) is characterized by the nuclear tabacum genome inside the debneyi cytoplasm. Techne plants present abnormal flowers with cytoplasmic male sterility (cytoplasmic marker) and sessile leave (nuclear marker). Techne leaf protoplasts were fused with leaf protoplasts of N. tabacum var. Samsun (or Xanthi). The last variety is characterized by petiolated leaves and normal flowers, because it possesses the nuclear tabacum genome associated with the tabacum cytoplasm. The nuclear marker (leaf shape) and the cytoplasmic one (flower shape inducing male sterility or fertility) have been used to distinguish among the whole regenerated plants the somatic nuclear hybrids and the cytoplasmic hybrids (cybrids) displaying the nuclear phenotype of one of the two parents associated with a modified flower type, intermediate between the parental ones.The chloroplastic (cp) DNA contained in each parent has been specifically identified by using EcoRI restriction nuclease and gel electrophoresis. EcoRI fragment patterns of cp DNA isolated from the first progeny of the regenerated cytoplasmic hybrids revealed that only one of the two parental cp DNAs is present in all cases; neither mixture of both parental cp DNAs nor recombinant cp DNA molecules were observed. This indicates that a specific elimination of one or the other parental cp DNAs occurs after the initial mixing of the cytoplasms. The study of the association of the modified flower type with the cp DNA isolated from the corresponding plant showed that cp DNA seems independent from the mechanism of cytoplasmic male sterility in tobacco.  相似文献   

15.
Following protoplast fusion between Nicotiana tabacum (dhfr) and N. megalosiphon (nptII) somatic hybrids were selected on the basis of dual resistance to kanamycin and methotrexate. Despite strong selection for parental nuclear-encoded resistances, only nine N. tabacum (+) N. megalosiphon somatic hybrids were obtained. A preferential loss of the parental N. tabacum nuclear and organelle genome was apparent in some plants in spite of the lack of genomic inactivation by the irradiation or chemical treatment of the parental protoplasts. Only six of the nine hybrids recovered possessed both parental profiles of nuclear RFLPs and isoenzymes. The remaining three hybrids were highly asymmetric with two being identical to N. megalosiphon except for minor morphological differences and rearranged or recombined mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNA), while the other one was distinguishable only by the presence of a rearranged or recombined mtDNA, and was therefore possibly a cybrid. Overall, eight somatic hybrids possessed rearranged or recombined mtDNAs and chloroplast inheritance was non-random since eight possessed N. megalosiphon-type chloroplasts and only one had N. tabacum chloroplasts. In contrast, using the same selection approach, numerous morphologically similar symmetric somatic hybrids with nuclear RFLPs and isozymes of both the parental species were recovered from control fusions between N. tabacum and the more closely related N. sylvestris. In spite of the low frequency of recovery of symmetric N. tabacum (+) N. megalosiphon hybrids in this study, one of these hybrids displayed a significant degree of self-fertility allowing for back-crosses to transfer N. megalosiphon disease-resistance traits to N. tabacum. Plant Research Centre Contribution No. 1579  相似文献   

16.
Summary The hypersensitive response of tobacco to inoculation with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is controlled by a single dominant gene, the N gene. As a first step in localizing and transferring the N gene, we have prepared a line of tobacco plants in which the kanamycin-resistance (Kmr) gene is closely linked to the N gene. Nicotiana tabacum plants heterozygous for the N gene were transformed to Kmr by Agrobacterium carrying pMON200. Eighty-nine independent transformed clones were regenerated and were backcrossed with nontransformed, TMV-sensitive plants. Progeny from these crosses were screened first for Kmr; then the Kmr progeny were inoculated with TMV and scored for the hypersensitive response. Of the initial 89 clones, 68 appeared to have integrated a single functional Kmr gene. Initial tests for TMV resistance indicated possible linkage between Kmr and the N gene in 11 plants. With further testing, linkage has been established for two of these plant lines. In one of these lines, the two genes were 30–40 map units apart, and evidence of somatic instability in the linkage was obtained. However, in the second line, linkage between Kmr and the N gene was tight, and recombination between the genes in this case was only 5%. Southern hybridization revealed that this plant contained only a single copy of the Kmr gene. Linkage between Kmr and the N gene in this plant line has been verified in each of two additional backcross generations.Abbreviations nptII Neomycin phosphotransferase gene - Kmr kanamycin resistant - Kms kanamycin sensitive - TMV tobacco mosaic virus - TMV-R TMV resistant - TMV-S TMV sensitive  相似文献   

17.
Summary Mesophyll protoplasts of the kanamycin-resistant nightshade, Atropa belladonna, were fused with mesophyll protoplasts of the phosphinothricin resistant-tobacco, Nicotiana tabacum. A total of 447 colonies resistant to both inhibitors was selected. Most of them regenerated shoots with morphology similar to one of the earlier obtained and described symmetric somatic hybrids Nicotiana + Atropa. However, three colonies (0.2%) regenerated vigorously growing tobacco-like shoots; they readily rooted, and after transfer to soil, developed into normal, fertile plants. Unlike their tobacco parental line, BarD, the obtained plants are resistant to kanamycin [they root normally in the presence of kanamycin (200 mg/1)] and possess activity of neomycin phosphotransferase (NPT II) with the same electrophoretic mobility as the one of the nightshade line. According to Southern blot hybridization analysis carried out with the use of radioactively labeled cloned fragments of the Citrus lemon ribosomal DNA repeat, as well as with Nicotiana plumbaginifolia genus-specific, interspersed repeat Inp, the kanamycin-resistant plants under investigation have only species-specific hybridizing bands from tobacco. Cytological analysis of the chromosome sets shows that plants of all three lines possess 48 large chromosomes similar to Nicotiana tabacum ones (2n = 48), and one small extra chromosome (chromosome fragment) similar to Atropa belladonna ones (2n = 72). Available data allow the conclusion that highly asymmetric, normal fertile somatic hybrids with a whole diploid Nicotiana tabacum genome and only part (not more than 2.8%) of an Atropa belladonna genome have been obtained without any pretreatment of a donor genome, although both these species are somatically congruent.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Protoplasts derived from suspension cultured cells of cytoplasmic male sterile Nicotiana tabacum (N. debneyi cytoplasm) and of fertile N. glutinosa were fused with the aid of polyethylene glycol (PEG). Out of 1,089 colonies developed from PEG-treated protoplasts, 29 restored whole plants.A somatic hybrid plant was selected on the basis of isoelectrofocusing analysis of Fraction I protein in leaves of regenerated plants. A newly created hybrid contained small subunits of both parents but only a N. glutinosa type large subunit.Male sterile character was conserved in a hybrid plant while leaf morphology was intermediate between the parents. By tobacco mosaic virus infection tests, the hybrid's leaves showed resistant symptoms, hypersensitive local lesions, which were due to N. glutinosa nuclear genome expression.Abbreviations PEG Polyethylene glycol - TMV Tobacco mosaic virus  相似文献   

19.
Nicotiana tabacum (+)N. rustica interspecific somatic hybrids were produced by fusion of leaf mesophyll protoplasts of transgenic methotrexate-resistantNicotiana tabacum L. with leaf mesophyll protoplasts of transgenic kanamycin-resistantN. rustica L. Somatic hybrids were selected on the basis of resistance to both methotrexate and kanamycin. Evidence for nuclear hybridization was obtained for 21 hybrids by restriction-fragment-length-polymorphism (RFLP) analysis using a heterologous wheat nuclear ribosomal-DNA (rDNA) probe and by analysis of glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase (GOT) isoenzymes. Chloroplasts segregated non-randomly as 20 of the somatic hybrids possessedN. rustica chloroplasts and only one hadN. tabacum chloroplasts. Patterns of mitochondrial inheritance were examined by hybridization of a heterologous wheat cytochrome oxidase subunit II (coxII) gene with genomic DNA of the somatic hybrids. Four somatic hybrids with hybridization patterns similar toN. rustica and 17 with hybridization patterns consistent with mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) rearrangement or recombination were obtained. None of the somatic hybrids had patterns ofcoxll hybridization identical withN. tabacum. Male-fertility levels in the hybrids ranged from undetectable to 87% and only nine hybrids produced a limited amount of viable seed. There was no apparent correlation between the patterns of organelle inheritance in the somatic hybrids and the relative degree of fertility.Contribution No. 1439 Plant Research CentreCurrent address: Plant Biotechnology Institute, National Research Council, 110 Gymmasium Road, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N OW9, Canada  相似文献   

20.
Intergeneric asymmetric somatic hybrids have been obtained by the fusion of metabolically inactivated protoplasts from embryogenic suspension cultures ofFestuca arundinacea (recipient) and protoplasts from a non-morphogenic cell suspension ofLolium multiflorum (donor) irradiated with 10, 25, 50, 100, 250 and 500 Gy of X-rays. Regenerating calli led to the recovery of genotypically and phenotypically different asymmetric somatic hybridFestulolium plants. The genome composition of the asymmetric somatic hybrid clones was characterized by quantitative dot-blot hybridizations using dispersed repetitive DNA sequences specific to tall fescue and Italian ryegrass. Data from dot-blot hybridizations using two cloned Italian ryegrass-specific sequences as probes showed that irradiation favoured a unidirectional elimination of most or part of the donor chromosomes in asymmetric somatic hybrid clones obtained from fusion experiments using donor protoplasts irradiated at doses 250 Gy. Irradiation of cells of the donor parent with 500 Gy prior to protoplast fusion produced highly asymmetric nuclear hybrids with over 80% elimination of the donor genome as well as clones showing a complete loss of donor chromosomes. Further information on the degree of asymmetry in regenerated hybrid plants was obtained from chromosomal analysis including in situ hybridizations withL. multiflorum-specific repetitive sequences. A Southern blot hybridization analysis using one chloroplast and six mitochondrial-specific probes revealed preferentially recipient-type organelles in asymmetric somatic hybrid clones obtained from fusion experiments with donor protoplasts irradiated with doses higher than 100 Gy. It is concluded that the irradiation of donor cells before fusion at different doses can be used for producing both nuclear hybrids with limited donor DNA elimination or highly asymmetric nuclear hybrid plants in an intergeneric graminaceous combination. For a wide range of radiation doses tested (25–250Gy), the degree of the species-specific genome elimination from the irradiated partner seems not to be dose dependent. A bias towards recipient-type organelles was apparent when extensive donor nuclear genome elimination occurred.Abbreviations cpDNA Chloroplast DNA - 2, 4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - FDA fluorescein diacetate - IOA iodoacetamide - mtDNA mitochondrial DNA - RFLP restriction fragment length polymorphism  相似文献   

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