AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers created advanced hybrids by cross-pollinating oilseed rape with wild radish and analyzed the genomic integration of oilseed rape regions in the hybrids over generations.
  • * Results showed that certain genomic regions of oilseed rape are more susceptible to being incorporated into the wild radish’s genome and this gene transfer could affect plant traits like height and seed production, suggesting that transgene insertion should consider gene stability to prevent unwanted gene flow.

Article Abstract

The effect of gene location within a crop genome on its transfer to a weed genome remains an open question for gene flow assessment. To elucidate this question, we analyzed advanced generations of intergeneric hybrids, derived from an initial pollination of known oilseed rape varieties (, AACC, 2 = 38) by a local population of wild radish (, RrRr, 2 = 18). After five generations of recurrent pollination, 307 G5 plants with a chromosome number similar to wild radish were genotyped using 105 specific markers well distributed along the chromosomes. They revealed that 49.8% of G5 plants carried at least one genomic region. According to the frequency of markers (0-28%), four classes were defined: Class 1 (near zero frequency), with 75 markers covering ∼70% of oilseed rape genome; Class 2 (low frequency), with 20 markers located on 11 genomic regions; Class 3 (high frequency), with eight markers on three genomic regions; and Class 4 (higher frequency), with two adjacent markers detected on A10. Therefore, some regions of the oilseed rape genome are more prone than others to be introgressed into wild radish. Inheritance and growth of plant progeny revealed that genomic regions of oilseed rape could be stably introduced into wild radish and variably impact the plant fitness (plant height and seed number). Our results pinpoint that novel technologies enabling the targeted insertion of transgenes should select genomic regions that are less likely to be introgressed into the weed genome, thereby reducing gene flow.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5500136PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/genetics.117.201715DOI Listing

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