SILENCING OF WAXY GENES IN RICE CONTAINING WX TRANSGENES

Citation
K. Itoh et al., SILENCING OF WAXY GENES IN RICE CONTAINING WX TRANSGENES, MGG. Molecular & general genetics, 255(4), 1997, pp. 351-358
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Genetics & Heredity",Biology
ISSN journal
00268925
Volume
255
Issue
4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
351 - 358
Database
ISI
SICI code
0026-8925(1997)255:4<351:SOWGIR>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
In order to study gene silencing in a monocot system we introduced a w axy (Wx) gene into rice. In the pollen grain of the transgenic wild-ty pe plants, two types of Wx gene silencing were observed: Type I in whi ch all the pollen grains showed the mutant (wx) phenotype, and Type II in which 50% of the pollen grains showed the wx phenotype. Analysis o f Wx gene expression in the progeny of selfing and outcrossing indicat ed that Wx gene silencing was meiotically transmitted to the offspring . The number of transgene copies and transgene loci was determined by Southern blot analysis and suggested that the Wx transgene may have a paramutagenic effect on the endogenous Wx genes. In contrast to the po llen grain, the wx phenotype was not observed in the endosperm. Howeve r, the level of WAXY (WX) protein in the endosperm of Type I lines was similar to that in non-transgenic seed, while in Type II lines two cl asses of seeds, showing high and low levels of the protein segregated. When the same transgene was introduced into wx mutants in which no Wx transcript was detectable, the transgene behaved as a dominant Mendel ian factor and no silencing was found, suggesting that the activity of the endogenous Wx gene influences the silencing phenomenon. Our study of Wx gene silencing in rice extends the well-known phenomenon of gen e silencing, so far observed mainly in dicots, to a cereal.