Analysis of gene-trap Ds rice populations in Korea

Sung Han Park, Nam Soo Jun, Chul Min Kim, Tae Yong Oh, Jin Huang, Yuan Hu Xuan, Soon Ju Park, Byoung Il Je, Hai Long Piao, Soo Hyun Park, Young Soon Cha, Byung Ohg Ahn, Hyeon So Ji, Myung Chul Lee, Seok Cheol Suh, Min Hee Nam, Moo Young Eun, Gihwan Yi, Doh Won Yun, Chang Deok Han

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

Insertional mutagen-mediated gene tagging populations have been essential resources for analyzing the function of plant genes. In rice, maize transposable elements have been successfully utilized to produce transposant populations. However, many generations and substantial field space are required to obtain a sufficiently sized transposant population. In rice, the japonica and indica subspecies are phenotypically and genetically divergent. Here, callus cultures with seeds carrying Ac and Ds were used to produce 89,700 lines of Dongjin, a japonica cultivar, and 6,200 lines of MGRI079, whose genome is composed of a mixture of the genetic backgrounds of japonica and indica. Of the more than 3,000 lines examined, 67% had Ds elements. Among the Ds-carrying lines, 81% of Dongjin and 63% of MGRI079 contained transposed Ds, with an average of around 2.0 copies. By examining more than 15,000 lines, it was found that 12% expressed the reporter gene GUS during the early-seedling stage. GUS was expressed in root hairs and crown root initials at estimated frequencies of 0.78% and 0.34%, respectively. The 5,271 analyzed Ds loci were found to be randomly distributed over all of the rice chromosomes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)373-384
Number of pages12
JournalPlant Molecular Biology
Volume65
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2007

Keywords

  • Ac/Ds
  • Flanking sequence tags
  • Gene trap
  • Insertional population
  • Rice

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