Salt stress alleviation in transgenic Vigna mungo L. Hepper (blackgram) by overexpression of the glyoxalase I gene using a novel Cestrum yellow leaf curling virus (CmYLCV) promoter (original) (raw)

Overexpression of GlyI and GlyII genes in transgenic tomato (Solanum lycopersicum Mill.) plants confers salt tolerance by decreasing oxidative stress

Molecular Biology Reports

The glyoxalase system plays an important role in various physiological processes in plants, including salt stress tolerance. We report the effects of overexpressing glyoxalase I and glyoxalase II genes in transgenic tomato (Solanum lycopersicum Mill.) cv. Ailsa Craig. Stable expression of both transgenes was detected in the transformed tomato plants under salt stress. The transgenic lines overexpressing GlyI and GlyII under a high NaCl concentration (800 mM) showed reduced lipid peroxidation and the production of H(2)O(2) in leaf tissues. A greater decrease in the chlorophyll a+b content in wild-type (WT) compared with transgenic lines was also observed. These results suggest that the over expression of two genes, GlyI and GlyII, may enhance salt stress tolerance by decreasing oxidative stress in transformed tomato plants. This work will help our understanding of the putative role of the glyoxalase system in the tolerance to abiotic stress in tomato plants.

Generation of marker free salt tolerant transgenic plants of Arabidopsis thaliana using the gly I gene and cre gene under inducible promoters

Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture, 2008

Despite the advances in transgenesis, transformation technologies still rely on the introduction of a selectable marker gene to identify cells and tissues that have integrated the gene of interest in their genome. The continuous presence of the marker genes in the transgenics is often controversial as it can potentially have multiple undesirable impacts. The present study employed the self-excising Cre-loxP system to generate marker-free Arabidopsis thaliana expressing the agronomically important glyoxalase I (glyI) gene from Brassica juncea to confer salt stress tolerance. A binary vector was constructed wherein the salt-inducible rd29A promoter was used to drive the expression of the glyI gene and the transformants of A. thaliana were recovered using kanamycin resistance as the selectable marker. The neomycin phosphotransferase II (nptII) gene was flanked by the loxP sites followed by the introduction of a heat-inducible Cre-recombinase in between the loxP sites. The kanamycin-resistant transgenic lines of A. thaliana using this vector showed an ability to withstand stress imposed by 150 mM NaCl. The exposure of the T2 transgenic lines to a mild heat shock (37°C) resulted in the recovery of salt-tolerant, kanamycin-sensitive T3 progeny. Molecular analyses of the T3 transgenic lines following the heat shock treatment confirmed the excision of the nptII gene and the completion of their life cycle in the presence of 150 mM NaCl-induced stress.

Enhanced germination under high-salt conditions of seeds of transgenic Arabidopsis with a bacterial gene ( codA ) for choline oxidase

Journal of Plant Research, 1998

Arabidopsis thaliana was transformed previously with thecodA gene from the soil bacteriumArthrobacter globiformis. This gene encodes choline oxidase, the enzyme that converts choline to glycinebetaine. Transformation with thecodA gene significantly enhanced the tolerance of transgenic plants to low temperature and high-salt stress. We report here that seeds of transgenic plants that expressed thecodA gene were also more tolerant to salt stress during germination than seeds of non-transformed wild-type plants. Seedlings of transgenic plants grew more rapidly than those of wild-type plants under salt-stress conditions. Furthermore, exogenously applied glycinebetaine was effective in alleviating the harmful effects of salt stress during germination of seeds and growth of young seedlings, a result that suggests that it was glycinebetaine that had enhanced the tolerance of the transgenic plants. These observations indicate that synthesis of glycinebetaine in transgenic plantsin vivo, as a result of the expression of thecodA gene, might be veryuseful in improving the ability of crop plants to tolerate salt stress.

Current trends in genetic manipulations to enhance abiotic and biotic stresses in tobacco

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY

Environmental stresses, both abiotic and biotic, are the main factors reducing crops productivity. Biotic stresses caused by fungi, viruses, bacteria and insects are the major threats. However, abiotic stresses have more adverse effects on crop yield and crop survival. Hitherto, tolerant plants were mainly produced by classical breeding techniques. Success in breeding for better adapted varieties to abiotic and biotic stresses depends on the concerted efforts of various research domains including plant and cell physiology, molecular biology, genetics and breeding. However, such process is time consuming. The production of transgenic plants by genetic engineering allows a much faster progress. This review focuses on stress tolerance on tobacco. Tolerance to salt, drought, water stress, low and high temperature, heavy metals, pathogens and pests were enhanced via overexpression of specific stress related genes from different sources.

Transgenics of an elite indica rice variety Pusa Basmati 1 harbouring the codA gene are highly tolerant to salt stress

TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik, 2002

Transgenic lines of indica rice were generated by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation with the choline oxidase ( codA) gene from Arthrobacter globiformis. Choline oxidase catalyses conversion of choline to glycine betaine. Glycine betaine is known to provide tolerance against a variety of stresses. Molecular analyses of seven independent transgenic lines as performed by Southern, Northern and Western hybridization revealed integration and expression of the transgene as well as inheritance in the progeny plants. A good correlation was observed between levels of mRNA and protein accumulation, and a significant amount of choline oxidase product, i.e. glycine betaine, accumulated in R0 as well as R1 plants. Mendelian as well as non-Mendelian segregation patterns were obtained in the progeny plants. Challenge studies performed with R1 plants by exposure to salt stress (0.15 M NaCl) for 1 week, followed by a recovery period, revealed that in some cases more than 50% of the transgenic pl...