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Title: EVALUATION OF TRANSGENIC COTTON (GOSSYPIUM HIRSUTUM) ENGINEERED FOR RESISTANCE TO MELOIDOGYNE INCOGNITA

Author
item Robinson, Arin
item Oliver, Melvin
item Velten, Jeffrey

Submitted to: Fundamental and Applied Nematology
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/22/1998
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Two gene constructs were inserted separately into cotton cv. Coker 312 via Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The first (construct A) combined the NRE (nematode response element) promoter, a truncated naturally occurring promoter from the root-specific TobRB7 tobacco gene with an attenuated barnase (cell toxin) coding region. The second (construct B) combined the NRE promoter with antisense of a cotton homologue of an abundant tobacco aquaporin regulating cell volume. The strategy for achieving nematode resistance with both constructs was dysfunction or autolysis of the giant nurse cells in nematode feeding sites in roots. Plantlets were confirmed transgenic by PCR and tested for nematode resistance in growth chambers (26-30 deg C) by transplanting into 500-cm**3 pots containing a 6:1 (v:v) mixture of sand and vermiculite, inoculating with 1,000 Meloidogyne incognita juveniles per pot, and extracting nematode eggs from roots 60 days later. GUS reporter gene expression in infected roots indicated NRE expression is specific to infection sites in cotton roots. Several promising cell lines with construct A or B were identified and true seedlings are being tested against M. incognita and Rotylenchulus reniformis.