Published October 19, 2007 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Meiotic Transmission of an In Vitro–Assembled Autonomous Maize Minichromosome

Description

Autonomous chromosomes are generated in yeast (yeast artificial chromosomes) and human fibrosarcoma cells (human artificial chromosomes) by introducing purified DNA fragments that nucleate a kinetochore, replicate, and segregate to daughter cells. These autonomous minichromosomes are convenient for manipulating and delivering DNA segments containing multiple genes. In contrast, commercial production of transgenic crops relies on methods that integrate one or a few genes into host chromosomes; extensive screening to identify insertions with the desired expression level, copy number, structure, and genomic location; and long breeding programs to produce varieties that carry multiple transgenes. As a step toward improving transgenic crop production, we report the development of autonomous maize minichromosomes (MMCs). We constructed circular MMCs by combining DsRed and nptII marker genes with 7–190 kb of genomic maize DNA fragments containing satellites, retroelements, and/or other repeats commonly found in centromeres and using particle bombardment to deliver these constructs into embryogenic maize tissue. We selected transformed cells, regenerated plants, and propagated their progeny for multiple generations in the absence of selection. Fluorescent in situ hybridization and segregation analysis demonstrated that autonomous MMCs can be mitotically and meiotically maintained. The MMC described here showed meiotic segregation ratios approaching Mendelian inheritance: 93% transmission as a disome (100% expected), 39% transmission as a monosome crossed to wild type (50% expected), and 59% transmission in self crosses (75% expected). The fluorescent DsRed reporter gene on the MMC was expressed through four generations, and Southern blot analysis indicated the encoded genes were intact. This novel approach for plant transformation can facilitate crop biotechnology by (i) combining several trait genes on a single DNA fragment, (ii) arranging genes in a defined sequence context for more consistent gene expression, and (iii) providing an independent linkage group that can be rapidly introgressed into various germplasms.

Files

journal.pgen.0030179.pdf

Files (2.8 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:b735056869259a7708ca8a0c08ae5854
322.8 kB Preview Download
md5:7091002a40f38d37c5ba59d612dc8cf0
2.5 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.0030179
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10301

Funding

National Institutes of Health
Small Business Innovation Research Phase II
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Advanced Technology Program

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology